
History of the Student Achievement Awards
Kinsman-Hurst Award (1929)
Delos Kinsman was chairman of the Economics Department: College
of Liberal Arts from 1925-1939; College of Arts and Sciences
from 1939-1953; the Undergraduate College from 1953-1958; and
again in the College of Arts and Sciences in 1958. Mr. Delos
also chaired the Fiftieth Anniversary of American University
Celebrations Committee of the Board of Trustees in 1942.
John Fletcher Hurst was born in 1834. Hurst served as president
of Drew Seminary, now known as Drew University, from 1873-1880.
In 1880 he was elected a bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church,
going on to serve as the resident bishop of Des Moines, Iowa
from 1880-1884, resident bishop of Buffalo, New York from 1884-1888,
and resident bishop of Washington DC from 1888-1903. One of
the founders of American University in 1891, he served as a
founding trustee from 1891-1903, and was elected a charter trustee
in 1893. He concurrently served as chancellor from 1891-1902,
and was elected chancellor emeritus by the Board of Trustees
in 1902.
Bruce Hughes Award (1937)
Born in Phillipsburg, Pennsylvania, Reverend Bruce Hughes attended
Dickinson preparatory school and graduated with honors from
Dickinson College in 1883. Shortly after graduation, he entered
the ministry, becoming a member of the Central Pennsylvania
Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church. His early work
focused on building and remodeling churches. Reverend Hughes
spent four years as pastor at Blair’s Mills in Franklin
County, Pennsylvania, where he was instrumental in building
a new church in Waterloo, one of the first landmarks of early
Methodism. He went on to build four additional churches and
dedicate four others during his ministry. Early in his ministry
he took a post-graduate course at Syracuse University and finished
his degree at Southern University. He was also a member of the
consulting staff of subscribers to Success Magazine. Among the
publications authored by Reverend Hughes Nuggets of Gold issued
in 1901 with the commendation of Bishop Thomas Bowman, senior
bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church; Self-Renunciation
in 1902; and The Coveted Inheritance in 1903.
Charles C. Glover Award (1950)
A noted Washington D.C. financier, Mr. Glover was born on a
North Carolina farm in 1846. He rose from inauspicious beginnings
as a bookstore and bank clerk to president of Riggs National
Bank. After holding that position for twenty-five years, Glover
was named Chairman of the Board. Glover also served as the treasurer
of the American University Board of Trustees from 1891-1922.
Mr. Glover was also associated with the establishment of Rock
Creek, Potomac, and Zoological parks in the D.C. area, and the
Corcoran Art Gallery. He is memorialized today by the AU gate
and the bridge where Massachusetts Avenue crosses Rock Creek
Park, which bear his name.
Fletcher Scholar Award (1951)
Former Vice Chairman and General Counsel of the Association
of American Railroads, Mr. Fletcher was first elected to the
American University Board of Trustees in 1943. He served as
Chairman from 1945-58, and received an Honorary Doctor of Laws
in 1947 for his outstanding contributions to American University.
Cathryn Seckler-Hudson Award (1964)
Born in Modale, Iowa, January 8, 1902, Ms. Seckler-Hudson received
a B.S. from Northwest Missouri State Teachers College in 1926,
M.A. from the University of Missouri in 1929, and Ph.D. from
American University in 1933. She taught social sciences from
1918-1926 at the elementary, junior and senior high school levels,
and from 1926-31 taught at Northeast Missouri Teachers College.
After receiving here Ph.D. from American University in 1933,
Ms. Seckler-Hudon began a nearly 30 year career at American
University. During her tenure, Seckler-Hudson served as professor
of Political Science and Public Administration; chair of the
Department of Government, Graduate School from 1934-38; and
chair of the Departments of Political Science and Public Administration.
Her most notable service to American University began n 1957
when she was named the first Dean of the School of Government
and Public Administration (now the School of Public Affairs).
Ms. Seckler-Hudson also held positions with the Federal Government
during her time in Washington, serving as Assistant to the Commissioner
of Immigration and Naturalization in 1938 and consultant to
the Office of Education in the Department of the Interior from
1939-1940.
Stafford H. Cassell Award (1966)
A native of Asberry, Virginia, Mr. Cassell completed academic
work at Dickinson Seminary (now Lycoming College) before enrolling
at American University and receiving his degree in 1936. Two
years later he received a Masters degree from Penn State University.
After serving in the Navy and as a coach and athletic director
at Morningside College in Iowa, Mr. Cassell returned to American
University in 1946. He went on to teach psychology and physical
education, serve as athletic director, head of the Department
of Physical Education and Health, administrative assistant to
the President and Vice President. Under his leadership as athletic
director, AU increased its athletic program from three to 11
sports and developed some of the Washington area’s greatest
athletes. (As an administrator, Dr. Cassell served in virtually
every area of university activity, as well as in numerous religious
and educational endeavors.)
Carlton Savage Award (1981)
After many years of distinguished service as a diplomat in the
United States Department of State, Mr. Savage came to American
University to teach in the School of International Service.
During his time at AU, faculty and students benefited from his
knowledge and experience in foreign affairs. As the advisor
to Pan Ethnon, a student organization in the School of International
Service, Mr. Savage helped members attract outstanding speakers
and plan programs promoting international understanding. He
also served as a long-time advisor to Delta Gamma Sorority.
After his retirement from AU, Mr. Savage remained active as
a volunteer advisor to several student groups. Because of his
extraordinary record as a diplomat, teacher, volunteer worker,
and loyal friend, President George H. Williams presented Mr.
Savage with a Presidential Citation from American University
on March 29, 1973.
Charles W. Van Way Award (1981)
Born at Fort Sam Houston, Texas in 1903, Charles W. Van Way
was a retired Army colonel. Colonel Van Way graduated from the
United States Military Academy in 1924 and was commissioned
in the infantry, serving tours of duty in Hawaii and the Panama
Canal Zone. He served on the staff of General of the Army, Omar
Bradley, and took part in the Normandy landings in northern
France. After retiring from the Army in 1959, he earned a Master
of Business Administration at American University and joined
the faculty of the AU business school. In 1959 he became dean
of students at the University and held that post until he retired
in 1968.
Evelyn Swarthout Hayes Award (1982)
A native of Kansas, Ms. Swarthout-Hayes was a professor of music
at American University from 1961-1976. Noted for her talent
as a concert pianist, Ms. Swarthout-Hayes championed the cause
of inter-disciplinarity in teaching music at a time when such
a practice was regarded radical. She was an active musician,
giving recitals at the National Gallery and Phillips Collection
in Washington D.C. She also created and hosted, “Music
in the Schools,” a radio program that featured recorded
music, pieces played by Ms. Swarthout-Hayes, and the voices
of imaginary characters. In 1997, along with her husband, Ms.
Swarthout-Hayes was awarded the Levine School of Music’s
Paul Hume Award for contributions to Washington D.C.’s
cultural history.
Harold Johnson Award (1987)
Born in New York City in 1919 and a graduate of St. John’s
University and the New York Theological Seminary, Reverend Johnson
was ordained in 1941, and moved to Washington D.C. in 1945.
He was pastor at John Wesley AME Zion, Kingman Park AME Zion,
and Plymouth Congregational Church in Washington. After spending
14 years as a computer programmer at the Pentagon, he was named
the first black pastor of an all-white Methodist church, Bells
Methodist Church in Camp Springs. In 1972, he was named District
Superintendent of the North District of the United Methodist
Church in Baltimore. Six years later he served as pastor at
Millian Memorial United Methodist. He was pastor of North Bethesda
Methodist from 1981 until his death in 1985. Reverend Johnson
was committed to higher education, serving as treasurer of the
Wesley Foundation at Howard University and a member of the American
University Board of Trustees. As an AU Trustee from 1975-1985,
he served on the development committee and chaired the university’s
student life committee.