William T. Jerome, III, President of BGSU (1963-1970)

At left, President William T. Jerome makes a point during an interview in his office. Jerome was BGSU’s sixth president, serving from 1963-1970.

William Travers Jerome, III was a 1941 magna cum laude graduate of Colgate University. He earned his master’s and doctorate degree from Harvard University and was awarded an honorary Doctor of Laws degree from Middlebury College, Vermont.

Dr. Jerome served as teacher, administrator, research associate, lecturer, writer and consultant to both business and government.

His career as an educational administrator began at Middlebury, Vermont, where he was assistant to the President and instructor in economics (1946-1950). In 1953 he was appointed Associate Professor of Business Administration at Syracuse University where, in 1958, he became Dean of the College of Business Administration.

In 1963, Dr. Jerome became the sixth president of Bowling Green State University. During his seven years here, he guided the University through a period of rapid physical and academic growth, as evidenced by the addition of ten buildings, including the library, by a major jump in enrollment, and by the establishment of programs such as the Center for the Study of Social Behavior. Library growth during this time included the establishment of the University Archives, the Historical Collections of the Great Lakes, and the Browne Popular Culture Library.

It fell to Dr. Jerome to guide the campus during the turbulent years of the Vietnam era. Thanks to his leadership, BGSU remained open during the days following the May 1970 Kent State shootings, the only Ohio state university to do so.

Dr. Jerome left BGSU in 1970 to accept a position as special consultant to the President of Florida International University. He later became Distinguished University Professor of Management at FIU.

In 1982, the Bowling Green State University Board of Trustees passed a resolution naming the University Library in honor of President-Emeritus Dr. William Travers Jerome, III. A rededication and naming ceremony was held on September 23, 1983. Dr. Jerome passed away on March 10, 2008.