Background
Dyke was born Franklin Moore Brown in San Francisco, on April 16, 1915. He was the son of Frank A. Brown and Dorothy Gary Moore. His mother used to call him a "cute little tyke".
Dyke was born Franklin Moore Brown in San Francisco, on April 16, 1915. He was the son of Frank A. Brown and Dorothy Gary Moore. His mother used to call him a "cute little tyke".
His high school years were spent at Piedmont High School. He graduated in 1932. Before enrolling in college, he traveled in Europe and attended the Schule Schloss Salem school in Germany, then under the direction of the noted educator, Kurt Hahn.
Returning to the United States., Brown attended University College Berkeley and graduated in 1936, with a Bachelor with highest honors and Phi Beta Kappa.
He then went to University of Oxford on a Rhodes Scholarship, from 1936 to 1938, earning a Bachelor of Arts and Master of Arts in Politics, Economics, and Philosophy. From Berkeley, Brown went to Yale Law School, where he earned a Juris Doctor degree in 1941, and was immediately hired as Assistant Dean and Assistant Professor of Law by Yale. America entered after the attack on Pearl Harbor, December 7, 1941.
Brown, like many of his generation, immediately enlisted in the Navy, and was appointed flag lieutenant and aide to Admiral Jules James, commander of the Sixth Naval District in Charleston, South Carolina.
Brown was on active duty from 1942 to 1945. After the war, Brown returned to San Francisco and his law career.
Horace Rowan Gaither was commissioned by the Ford Foundation"s Board of Trustees to create a series of studies to guide the Foundation"s growth. In 1949, Gaither recruited Brown to serve as an Assistant Director of the Study for the Ford Foundation on Policy and Program.
In 1953, Dyke was elected a Vice President of the Ford Foundation, with an emphasis on the Foundation"s Public Affairs Program and the Program in Economic Development and Administration.
The Brown family moved from California to Scarsdale, New New York He conceived the desire to start a boarding school that would embody his ideas. Brown left the Ford Foundation in 1962, and returned to the San Francisco Bay Area to raise funds and look for land for the school.
In 1963, a portion of the Blackhawk Ranch was purchased, and construction began.
The school opened with 9th and 10th grades, in the fall of 1965. In the early years, Brown also taught a seminar to upperclassmen in constitutional law.
Brown retired from active service to Athenian in 1977, focusing his interest on younger children. He coordinated with the Hewlett Foundation to create the Child Development Project.
Brown was strongly influenced by Kurt Hahn, the German educator who founded Outward Bound and Gordonstoun in Scotland.
The conferences of schools influenced by Hahn"s educational ideas is called Round Square.
Foreign many years, Athenian was the only American member of the Round Square conference.