Education
College of William & Mary. University of Virginia.
Alderman educator engineer president
College of William & Mary. University of Virginia.
He served as the second president of the University of Virginia, ascending to the position after the death of Edwin Alderman. Born December 18, 1881 in Sassafras, Gloucester County, Virginia, Newcomb received his Bachelor of Arts from the College of William and Mary in 1900 and subsequently took a degree in Civil Engineering from the University of Virginia in 1903. While a student and after receiving his civil engineering degree he worked as a computer in the engineering office of the Rapid Transit Subway Construction Company in New York and as an engineer for the Norfolk and Southern Railway.
Newcomb was appointed an adjunct professor of civil engineering in 1905 by the Board of Visitors of UVA. He became Edwin Alderman"s assistant in 1926 and succeeded Alderman after the first UVA president died of complications from a stroke.
He was confirmed in the position after nearly two years as acting president, despite his lack of national renown. While president of the University, Newcomb received honorary degrees from Washington and Lee University (doctor of science, 1933) and from his alma mater, the College of William and Mary (Doctor of Laws 1935).
He died on February 22, 1954. In 1958 the Seven Society donated $17,777.77 to establish a loan fund for faculty and students in Newcomb"s honor.
An engineering professorship, the John Lloyd Newcomb Professor of Material Science and Engineering Physics, is endowed in Newcomb"s memory, and the student union building at Virginia, Newcomb Hall, is named after him.
1905-1925 – Professor of Civil Engineering, University of Virginia (Charlottesville, Virginia)
1925-1931 – Dean of Engineering, University of Virginia
1926-1931 – Assistant to the President, University of Virginia
1931-1933 – Acting President, University of Virginia
1933-1947 – President of the University of Virginia.
Newcomb, a member of the engineering faculty of the University, oversaw the University through the Depression and the Second World War and managed its physical expansion, including the building of Scott Stadium, the Bayly Art Museum, and Alderman Library. After his death, Newcomb was revealed to be a member of the Seven Society, the UVA secret society known for its gifts to and support of the University community.