Lehr (1871-1900)

Henry Solomon Lehr, first president of Ohio Northern University, was born in Ohltown (now Mahoning County) on March 8, 1838. His life and career in higher education are covered in depth in the following works.


History of the ONU

H.S. Lehr and His School


Belt (1900-1905)

President Leroy A. Belt was born in Delaware County, Ohio in 1837. Although nearly the same age (Belt was one year older than his predecessor), Drs. Lehr and Belt came from different backgrounds. Lehr was, by his own account, from a poor family and completed his education as funds permitted. Belt came from a comfortable if not wealthy background. He enrolled at Ohio Wesleyan University around 1855 and graduated in 1861 after having studied for the ministry. He served at several Methodist churches, first in Van Wert, Ohio, and later at Wapakonetta, Ottawa, Bellefontaine, Marion and Toledo. In 1871, Dr. Belt became a trustee of his alma mater and also served as financial agent for Monnett Hall, an independent women's academy, which merged with Ohio Wesleyan in 1877. In addition, he gained administrative experience through holding several positions in his church conference.


Smith (1905-1930)

Albert Edwin Smith, the son of Edwin Hugo and Mary Ann Lindsey Smith, was born at New Richmond in Clermont County, Ohio December 16, 1860. He attended the public schools of New Richmond, both grade and high school. He then entered the Clermont Academy, graduating in 1882. He entered Ohio Wesleyan University and graduated from that institution in 1887 with a B.A. degree. He later received an M.A. degree from Wesleyan and in 1897, was also awarded a PhD. In October 1887, he married one of his classmates, Harriet Vergon.

That same year, he joined the Central Ohio conference of the Methodist church, and the next eighteen years saw Smith serving in pastorates at York, Celina, Toledo, Defiance and Marion.

Smith had been one of the trustees selected by the Methodist church in 1900 after its transfer from Pres. Lehr and his colleagues. On June 27, 1905 he was elected president of Ohio Northern by the Board of Trustees. He was inaugurated on July 20, 1905.

Smith, a man of opinions strongly held, sought to modernize the university and to elevate its moral tone. This latter effort brought him into frequent conflict with the student body over the years. The guiding principles of his efforts may be found in Souls in Armour, a collection of his baccalaureate speeches.

His administration was marked by major changes in the university's curricula and by the expansion of the campus. At his retirement, eight of the 10 buildings then in existence had been constructed or put into use during his tenure.

In 1929, Dr. Smith turned over the active administration of the university to his successor, Pres. Robert Williams, however, he officially held the position of president until 1930. Following his retirement, Dr. Smith lived in Findlay, Winter Haven, Florida and Lakeside. It was at Lakeside, Ohio where, in July 1941, he became ill. Returning to Findlay, he died on August 26, 1941.


Williams (1929-1943)

Robert Williams was born March 4, 1884 in Skipton, Yorkshire, England. He received his A.B. degree from Wesleyan University, Middletown, Connecticut in 1911. He received a Master of Arts in Philosophy from Boston University. He served as a pastor in the New York East Conference for eleven years. Between 1918 and 1921, he was dean and professor of English and Greek at Williamsport Dickinson seminary at Williamsport, Pa. In 1921, Williams became dean and professor in Philosophy at Albion College. 

The university Board of Trustees selected Robert Owen Williams as Northern's fourth president on December 26, 1928. This was with the understanding that he would serve as acting president until Dr. Smith's formal retirement in June 1930. President Williams began his duties on September 1, 1929.

President William's administration was characterized by efforts to cope, first with the Great Depression and then with the Second World War. Despite falling enrollments and budgetary austerity, Williams was able to keep the university afloat up through his retirement in June 1943. In poor health at the time of his retirement, Williams died the following June in Van Wert, Ohio.


McClure (1943-1949)

Robert O. McClure was born in Henderson County, Kentucky on August 5, 1887. He graduated from Asbury College and also completed post-graduate work at Northwestern University and Garrett Biblical Institute.

During the First World War, McClure served overseas as an army chaplain. After leaving the army, he became president of Belle City College in Lake Charles, La. where he served for five years.  McClure was appointed to the Athens district superintendency in 1930 and subsequently served as Chillicothe district superintendent. His duties as pastor took him to the Epworth Church in Toledo and the First Church in Newark. In 1941, McClure was selected as the Lima district superintendent.

President McClure became acting president in July 1, 1943 following Pres. William's resignation. He was subsequently made permanent president though he continued as superintendent of the Lima district. Given the university's dire financial situation, Dr. McClure chose to serve his first year as president without pay.

Under Dr. McClure's administration, Northern began to shake off the effects of two decades of crises. Enrollments increased, fundraising efforts were expanded, and work began on garnering accreditation for the institution's academic programs. In 1948, however, illness forced President McClure to request that the Board of Trustees give him a leave of absence. A three month break brought some temporary improvement, but the following year he resigned, effective April 9, 1949. He died at Winter Park, Fl. On June 1, 1952.


McIntosh (1949-1965)

Ohio Northern University's sixth president, Frank Bringle McIntosh, was born May 26, 1895, on a farm near New Albany, Indiana. He received a B.A. from DePauw University and in 1923, an STB degree from Boston University. As an ordained Methodist minister, his early exposure to higher education came through pastorates at Muskingum College, Denison University and Otterbein College. When he assumed the presidency of Ohio Northern, Dr. McIntosh was serving as superintendent of the Toledo district of the Methodist Church, a post which he had held since 1944. He was also a member of the board of education of the Methodist Church, a member of the executive and advisory committee of that board, as well as secretary of the church's division of colleges and universities. In addition, he was also a trustee of Ohio Wesleyan University. Although he assumed the duties of office on June 30, 1949, President McIntosh was not installed until October 9.


Meyer (1965-1977)

Ohio Northern University's seventh president, Dr. Samuel Lewis Meyer, was born on November 9, 1906, in Steinmetz, Missouri. He received a bachelor's degree from Central College in Fayette, Missouri in 1930, and was awarded a master of science degree from Vanderbilt in 1932. Dr. Meyer received his Ph.D. from the University of Virginia in 1940.

He taught as an assistant professor of botany at the University of Tennessee between 1940 and 1945 and served as professor and department head from 1946 to 1951. His next teaching assignment was at Florida State University, where he was head of the botany department from 1951 to 1955. Dr. Meyer returned to his undergraduate alma mater in 1955 as dean of the college and remained there for the next three years. In 1958, he moved to Stockton, California, where he served as academic vice-president at the University of the Pacific, the position from which he was recruited as Northern's head.

Unlike other post-Lehr presidents, President Meyer did not come to office through the Methodist Church. Indeed, he was the first president since Dr. Belt who was not an ordained Methodist minister. President Meyer was inaugurated on October 15, 1965.


Loeschner (1977-1979)

Dr. Ray B. Loeschner was born in McCordsville, Indiana, and grew up in Grand Rapids, Michigan. He attended Grand Rapids Junior College where he earned an associate of arts degree in 1951. In 1953, he graduated from Albion College with a B.A. He completed his education by earning an M.A. and a Ph.D. in psychology-guidance and administration at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois.

Before beginning his graduate studies, Loeschner served as an instructor and coach at Lake Forest College. While at Northwestern, he served as an instructor in education and psychology, a residence hall counselor and an assistant coach.

Dr. Loeschner began his post-graduate career by teaching as an assistant professor of education at Augustana College in Rock Island, Illinois, from 1959-64. Between 1964 and 1966, he served as dean of student affairs and a professor of psychology and education at Washburn University in Topeka, Kansas. At Washburn, he also was a member of the president's cabinet. In that post, he was responsible for Washburn's law and graduate schools.

In 1966, Loeschner returned to Michigan, this time as assistant to the president at Eastern Michigan University. The following year, he was also appointed vice president for administrative affairs at Eastern Michigan. This post included supervisory responsibilities for academic affairs, student affairs, public affairs and off-campus education. In 1970, Loeschner was appointed president of Olivet College (Olivet, MI), a post he held until 1977.

Dr. Loeschner assumed the presidency of Ohio Northern University on August 1, 1977 and served until July 31, 1979.


Freed (1979-1999)

DeBow Freed was born August 26, 1925, in Hendersonville, Tennessee. He received a B.S. from the U.S. Military Academy at West Point in 1946 and served in the U.S. Army until 1969. During his last two years of service, he taught physics at West Point. In 1961, he earned an M.S. from the University of Kansas and five years later, a Ph.D. from the University of New Mexico. In 1949, while on active duty, he married Catherine Carol Moore.

Dr. Freed served as dean of Mount Union College from 1969 to 1974, until he was selected as president of Monmouth College, Monmouth, Illinois. At Monmouth, the Freeds were active in campus and community activities. Under President Freed, enrollment stabilized, and an increased sense of community was evident.

At a special meeting on September 15, 1979, The Ohio Northern Board of Trustees selected Dr. Freed as Ohio Northern University's ninth president and he served in that position until August 31, 1999. During this time, many improvements were made to campus buildings as well as the construction of the Freed Center for the Performing Arts. He was elected President Emeritus effective September 1, 1999.


Baker (1999-Current)

Current information can be at Dr. Baker's biographical web site.


An extensive collection of information about the history of Ohio Northern University can be found in the "ONU Historical and Genealogical Resources".

This page was updated Monday, October 27, 2003


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