ELWYN B. ROBINSON DEPARTMENT OF SPECIAL COLLECTIONS
CHESTER FRITZ LIBRARY
UNIVERSITY OF NORTH DAKOTA
GRAND FORKS, NORTH DAKOTA 58202
COLLECTION: OGL #28
DATES: 1879-1936
SIZE: 2 linear feet
ACQUISITION: The Joseph Kennedy Papers were deposited in the Orin G. Libby Manuscript Collection. The acquisition records are unavailable.
ACCESS: Available for inspection under the rules and regulations of the Department of Special Collections.
RELATED PUBLICATIONS:
Fundamentals in methods in elementary schools by
Joseph Kennedy. New York:
Macmillan, 1915. Call Number: LB1025 .K36
Rural life and the rural school by Joseph Kennedy. New
York: American Book Company, 1915.
Call Number: LB1567 .K4
Dr. Joseph Kennedy was born on July 14, 1858, in Oshawa, Nicollet County, Minnesota, to Patrick and Elizabeth (Meaney) Kennedy. Patrick Kennedy had emigrated from Waterford in County Kilkenny, Ireland in 1849 and made his home in an agricultural region twenty miles north of Baltimore, Maryland, laboring as a farmer for eight years. It was in that part of the country that he married his wife, Elizabeth, also from Kilkenny County, and in 1857 the two went to Nicollet County, Minnesota, to claim 80 acres of government land.
The couples move to a rural community did not prevent their young son, Joseph, from developing intellectually. He attended rural schools and eventually found himself in a position as one of its teachers, beginning as early as 1876, preceding his enrollment to the University of Minnesota in the spring of 1878. He did not graduate from the University until 1886 with a Bachelor of Arts degree as he took absences during his matriculation to teach several terms in these rural schools. In 1901, he received a Master of Arts degree.
In September 1886, Kennedy came to North Dakota and became a principal of two city schools in Hillsboro, North Dakota, and remained in this position for two years. In the winter of 1886 he visited the campus of the University of North Dakota in Grand Forks and met with four pioneer educators, serving at the institutions faculty, who so impressed Kennedy that he dubbed them the four horsemen of the university apocalypse. These four horsemen with saddle and lance were Dr. Henry Montgomery, Dr. Webster Merrifield, Dr. John Macnie, and Dr. H.B. Woodworth. After this visit, he returned to Hillsboro. A year later, Kennedy was elected the superintendent of schools in Traill County, North Dakota.
Serving four years in the capacity as superintendent, it was not until October 1, 1892 that his profession changed direction when he came to the young University of North Dakota to serve as Assistant Professor of Pedagogy and Principal of the Normal Department. But in this post he did not stay long, for only one year after his appointment, he became Head of the Department of Education. Following the retirement of Dr. Woodworth, he became a professor of philosophy and education. In 1901, he was made Dean of the Normal College, which later became the School of Education. He served as Dean until 1928 when he retired and became dean emeritus, an honor which he was first to receive in the universitys history.
Throughout his stay in North Dakota, Kennedy spent his summers either lecturing on education or conducting teachers institutes. His contribution to the educational system of North Dakota is illustrative in the appointments and committees he sat on. He was president of the North Dakota Education Association in 1895 and was a lifelong member. He was appointed by North Dakota Governor John Burke to both the State Law Codification Commission from 1909 to 1911 and the State Board of Examiners for the Certification of Teachers. In 1918, Dean Kennedy received an honorary degree of LL.D from the University of North Dakota. Inasmuch as Kennedy was committed to the project of Education for the state of North Dakota, he found time to devote his time to local affairs as a member of the Board of Park Commissioners in Grand Forks from 1907, when it was first organized, until 1928.
Kennedy authored the books Rural Life and the Rural School (1915) and Fundamentals in Methods in Elementary School (1915). Apart from his role as a writer, he was also the editor of the School of Education Record from 1915 to 1928.
He was married to Elizabeth Davis of Hillsboro on June 20, 1889, in Grand Forks, North Dakota. The couple had two sons, James and Lawrence. Dr. Joseph Kennedy died on April 1, 1937, in Grand Forks, and is buried in Calvary Cemetery.
The Joseph Kennedy Papers date from 1879-1936, and consist primarily of Kennedys academic writings. Included are several book-length manuscripts, Points of View in Education and Life, Introductory Ethics, Modern Logic, and Principles and Problems of Education. Numerous manuscripts for journal articles, as well as the text for speeches are also included.
The collection also includes biographical material, correspondence, materials related to both the University of North Dakota and the North Dakota Education Association, and miscellaneous certificates and diplomas. Fifty-four photographs were separated and added to the Orin G. Libby Photograph Collection.
Box 1
Folder
Box 2
Folder
54 photographs were separated and placed in the Orin G. Libby Photograph Collection.
| OGL#28-1 |
Joseph Kennedys Mother |
| OGL#28-2 |
On the porch with Mrs. Kennedy and James, 1895 |
| OGL#28-3 |
Judge ? |
| OGL#28-4 |
Mrs. Joseph Kennedy (Elizabeth) |
| OGL#28-5 |
Jacob Summers in the fields, July 12, 1928 |
| OGL#28-6 |
George MacFarlane, 1929 |
| OGL#28-7 |
Lawrence Kennedy (on right) with Man |
| OGL#28-8 |
Woman on the shores of a lake holding a caught fish |
| OGL#28-9 |
Panorama of St. Peter, July 2, 1928 |
| OGL#28-10 |
Panorama of shoreline in Diamond Pint, Bemidji |
| OGL#28-11 |
Campsite on the river |
| OGL#28-12 |
Panorama of North Dakota Prairie |
| OGL#28-13 |
Field where a log house once stood; site where Kennedy was born |
| OGL#28-14 |
Same as OGL#28-13 |
| OGL#28-15 |
Panorama of queue of horse-drawn buggies |
| OGL#28-16 |
Indian in Grand Forks, North Dakota Sept. 1897 |
| OGL#28-17 |
Postcard of a building in Bismarck, North Dakota |
| OGL#28-18 |
Original picture of postcard in OGL#28-17 |
| OGL#28-19 |
Joseph Kennedys home |
| OGL#28-20 |
Joseph Kennedys home with other homes, July 1920 |
| OGL#28-21 |
Schoolhouse in Nicollet County, Minnesota with Mrs. Kennedy and Kate Gamble, July 12, 1928 |
| OGL#28-22 |
Unknown house |
| OGL#28-23 |
1100 Broadway,1895 (Now University Avenue) |
| OGL#28-24 |
1100 Broadway, 1895 (Now University Avenue) |
| OGL#28-25 |
Kennedys neighbors house, 1102 Broadway |
| OGL#28-26 |
Living room of Joseph Kennedys first house |
| OGL#28-27 |
Schoolhouse of Kennedys children in Oshawa, Minnesota |
| OGL#28-28 |
Birthplace of James P. Kennedy, Hillsboro, North Dakota, 1890, house |
| OGL#28-29 |
House that had once served as a school where Kennedy taught in 1876 |
| OGL#28-30 |
Schoolhouse where Kennedy taught between Winter 1882 and the Summer 1883, now transformed into a barn |
| OGL#28-31 |
University of North Dakotas campus, 4 buildings seen on the horizon |
| OGL#28-32 |
Main Building, University of North Dakotas early building |
| OGL#28-33 |
Postcard Panorama of University of North Dakota, 1905 |
| OGL#28-34 |
Postcard of house with man and dog sitting on the steps to porch, Bemidji 1911 |
| OGL#28-35 |
College of Bemidji |
| OGL#28-36 |
Kennedy with dog sitting on stairs to porch |
| OGL#28-37 |
Horse Nellie April 23, 1898 |
| OGL#28-38 |
Kennedy with two women posing in front of car |
| OGL#28-39 |
Dean Mrs. Kennedy at the University of North Dakota, couples anniversary |
| OGL#28-40 |
Dean Mrs. Kennedy at the University of North Dakota, couples anniversary |
| OGL#28-41 |
Overn and Kennedy, 1931 |
| OGL#28-42 |
1208 University Avenue |
| OGL#28-43 |
Kennedy posing with caught fish hanging from a clothesline |
| OGL#28-44 |
Kennedy with his dog, Jack |
| OGL#28-45 |
Young Kennedy |
| OGL#28-46 |
Young Kennedy, circa 1870 |
| OGL#28-47 |
Young Kennedy as a student at the University of Minnesota, circa 1879 |
| OGL#28-48 |
Professional photograph of Kennedy |
| OGL#28-49 |
Portrait of Kennedy |
| OGL#28-50 |
Kennedy looking into the vista |
| OGL#28-51 |
Kennedy with his bicycle and new red Buick in front of home, 1923 |
| OGL#28-52 |
Portrait of Kennedy |
| OGL#28-53 |
Portrait of Kennedy |
| OGL#28-54 |
James Kennedy, son |
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