Education
He grew up in Jamaica Plain, a historic neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts, and he graduated from Roxbury Latin School. Woodman then completed his undergraduate studies at Harvard University in 1888.
He grew up in Jamaica Plain, a historic neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts, and he graduated from Roxbury Latin School. Woodman then completed his undergraduate studies at Harvard University in 1888.
Woodman then served as the school"s first headmaster during its first 19 years (1898-1917). During World War I, he served as an educational advisor for the Young Men’s Christian Association in France. Woodman later worked as an independent education consultant.
Woodman was born on June 13, 1864.
During his studies at Harvard, Woodman played the positions of left tackle and placekicker for the Harvard Crimson football team with the nickname of "Jumbo". In an exhibition game played against Philips Exeter Academy, Woodman successfully kicked 20 field goals.
The game had a final score of 154-0. Woodman also played on Harvard"s crew team alongside Charles Francis Adams III, the Secretary of the Navy during the Hoover Presidential Administration.
After Woodman fell ill in 1948, four Harvard football players from the 1947 team, including the team captain, donated blood to assist his recovery.
Following graduation from college, Woodman joined the publishing firm Longmans, Green, & Company (now an imprint of Pearson Public Limited Company). He served as head of the educational department at their New York City office for seven years.
Woodman married Melanie Martha Muller in Newburyport, Massachusetts on June 29, 1943.
At the time, Muller served as the head of the Art Department at Colby College in Waterville, Maine.