Frederick Watts, beneficent Founder of Pennsylvania State University
Grand Old Partisan celebrates more than seventeen decades of Republican heroes and heroics. Today, I honor Frederick Watts, born in Pennsylvania, May 9th 1801. He studied law and twenty years worked for the state supreme court. Age forty-eight, a Whig governor appointed him to the bench. Watts benefited his local economy in many ways, setting up a gas and water company, also a railroad. He developed a model farm, introducing new crops and mechanical devices. In 1855, Watts established a school with the objective of "improving farming through the practical application of science." It expanded thanks to the GOP’s Land-Grant College Act. The name later changed to Pennsylvania Agricultural College, then to Pennsylvania State University. In 1871, President Ulysses Grant named him U.S. Commissioner of Agriculture. Watts aimed to improve farm productivity as well as farmers' lives. He inventoried the nation’s forests, prom...