Wilbur Lucius Cross was an American literary critic who served as the 71st Governor of Connecticut from 1931 to 1939.
Education
Born in 1862 in Mansfield, Connecticut, Cross graduated from Yale University (Bachelor 1885) and served as principal of Staples High School in Westport, Connecticut for a short time around 1885 before returning to Yale as a graduate student, earning a Doctor of Philosophy in English literature in 1889.
Career
Cross spent several years as a high school principal and schoolteacher at Staples High School in Westport before being offered a job as a professor of English at Yale in 1894. Over the next 36 years, he taught at Yale, became editor of the Yale Review, Sterling Professor of English in 1922, and Dean of the Yale Graduate School from 1916 to 1930. Cross became a well-known literary critic.
Along with C. F. Tucker Brooke, Cross was the editor of the Yale Shakespeare.
He also edited the Yale Review for almost 30 years. He wrote several books, including Life and Times of Laurence Sterne (1909) and The History of Henry Fielding (1918), and several books on the English novel.
After retiring from Yale, Cross was elected governor of Connecticut as a Democrat in 1930 and served as Governor for four two-year terms, from January 7, 1931 to January 4, 1939. He was a Delegate to the Democratic National Convention from Connecticut in 1936.
He was defeated in 1938 in his attempt to gain re-election for a fifth term.
He is credited with passage of several items of reform legislation during his tenure of governor, which included measures related to the abolition of child labor, and instituted a minimum wage rate. Also there was legislation that authorized governmental reorganization, and improved factory laws. He also endorsed legislation that authorized funding for the rebuilding of the Connecticut State College, which included the construction of the first campus library, named the Cross Library.
After retiring from public service, he continued to stay active in his writing and research projects.
Cross died on October 5, 1948 in New Haven, at the age of 86. He is interred at Evergreen Cemetery, New Haven, Connecticut.
The first campus library at the University of Connecticut (then Connecticut State College), built with bond revenues authorized during Cross"s governorship and opened in 1939, was named for Cross in 1942. Wilbur Cross"s autobiography, Connecticut Yankee, was published in 1943.