Thomas Poe Cooper
1917-1951
Thomas Poe Cooper was the longest serving dean of the College of Agriculture and director of the Kentucky Agriculture Experiment Station, with a tenure that stretched from 1917 to 1951. Prior to his appointment in Kentucky, he had served as director of the North Dakota Agriculture Experiment Station.
He was appointed to lead the UK College of Agriculture at a difficult time, roughly nine months after the United States entered World War I. He grew to become one of the best-known and most widely respected leaders among directors and deans of land-grant institutions during his tenure. Cooper negotiated the transfer of roughly 15,000 acres of land in Eastern Kentucky for the creation of the Robinson Sub-Experiment Station, dedicated in 1925. He also oversaw the formation of the West Kentucky Sub-Experiment Station in Princeton, Kentucky, shortly thereafter, significantly expanding UK’s engagement across the state.
He concurrently served the U.S. Department of Agriculture as chief of the Bureau of Agricultural Economics for nine months in 1925 and also served as acting president of the University of Kentucky from 1940 to 1941.
Shortly before his retirement, an editorial in the Lexington Leader lauded his more than three decades of service at UK as monumental: “Conservation of the soil and new and better methods of cultivation, along with studies on plant diseases and their control, important as these have been, have been exceeded in value by the thorough training of young men and women in the methods and economics of modern agriculture. … His personality, his capacity for leadership, his rare ability to make friends and draw men to him, have been powerful elements in the solution of the many problems affecting the lives and fortunes of the people of this state.”