Dr. Charles H. Fisher 1920-1923

Dr. Fisher's most ambitious project at BSNS was the establishment of
a Bureau of Educational Research. In 1922 he started a three-year
course for teachers of junior high school age students, which was the normal
school's first step towards college status. In 1923 he resigned from Bloomsburg
and became president of the Western Washington State Teachers College at
Bellingham. Fisher left there after sixteen years when a dispute developed
over his defense of academic freedom. He later worked as a professor of
education administration at New York University, and in 1942 became the
Dean of Huron College in South Dakota. In the last years of World War II
he returned to Washington to work as a materials priority director for
the state. Charles Fisher died on December 8, 1964 at the age of
84 in a suburb of Seattle, Washington. In 1968 Western Washington
honored Dr. Fisher by dedicating the Fisher Fountain to his memory.