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Roland Renne

Roland R. Renne (December 12, 1905 – August 30, 1989) was an American agricultural economics professor who served as President of Montana State College from 1943 to 1964. Renne was also active in Washington, D.C., and United States overseas agricultural economics work. He was the 1964 Democratic candidate for governor of Montana.

Biography

Roland Renne, born on December 12, 1905, was the third of five children born to Fred Christian Renne and Caroline Augusta (Young) Renne. Roland grew up on the family's truck and dairy farm in the remote Pine Barrens of southern New Jersey.[1][2] As a boy, he helped his father on the farm and attended country schools. He attended Rutgers University and graduated summa cum laud in 1927.[2] He continued his education and obtained his Ph.D. in Agricultural Economics from University of Wisconsin in 1930.[2]

Rutgers University and University of Wisconsin are both land-grant schools and each influenced the development of Roland Renne's educational philosophy and championing of public education.[1] Two economists heavily influenced Renne; the economist Richard T. Ely and John R. Commons.[1] Following his graduation in 1930, Renne arrived in Bozeman, Montana to start his teaching at Montana State College as Assistant Professor of Agriculture Economics. On August 19, 1932 he married Mary Polly Kneeland Wisner[3] with whom he had four children.

Renne died in Bozeman, Montana on August 30, 1989.[2]

Career

Renne went to Montana State College in Bozeman, Montana in 1930 to work as Assistant Professor of Agricultural Economics. Renne was an Agricultural Economics Professor and Agriculture Department Head from 1930 to 1943 and President of Montana State College from 1943 to 1964.

During the U.S. Depression years and World War II years, Renne devoted much of his time to educational outreach with small farmers and agricultural labor in support of both the WPA and World War II war efforts.[1] As the Agricultural Economics Department head and chairman of the Bozeman city school board, Renne worked closely with the WPA to obtain New Deal educational funds for the construction of three new Bozeman, Montana elementary schools: Hawthorne, Irving and Longfellow.[1]

In 1942, Renne accepted a position in Montana's Office of Price Administration and Civilian Supply (OPA), but in the following year, 1943, Renne left OPA and was appointed Acting President of MSC. In 1944 Renne was appointed President of Montana State College.[1]

At the close of WWII, Renne recognized the G.I.Bill (Servicemen's readjustment Act) of 1944 passed by Congress was quickly increasing the demand for classrooms, additional faculty and increased student housing by new student G.I.s and their families. Because of the G.I. Bill, MSC's student body almost doubled from 1,155 in 1945 to 2,014 in 1946, and doubled again in 1947 to 3,591.[1] With qualifying veterans returning to college at the end of the WW II, Renne provided active leadership to make the necessary changes on campus to accommodate those men and women who used the G.I. Bill to get a higher education degree at MSC. With a huge growth in students came an increase in faculty with the faculty almost doubling from 132 in 1945 to 257 in 1950.[1]

Renne Library on the MSU Campus

To meet the immediate needs of G.I. student and faculty housing and expanded classrooms, Renne installed recycled wooden buildings from a chrome mining project in Columbus, Montana to serve as classrooms for physics, chemistry lab, nursing, education, engineering, agriculture wool lab, psychology and music.[1] To accommodate student and new faculty housing, Renne found prefab war-surplus wooden frame building, quonset huts, barracks, and over 100 small trailers.[1] Then he went to the state capitol, Helena, Montana, and worked with the legislature to use some of the $4.5 million war surplus monies to fund a new brick library, update older buildings, and upgrade the physical plant.[1] Renne also recognized that immediately following the end of WWII, only 16.9% of all instructional budget was spent on humanities and social sciences and called for substantial budgetary increases for liberal arts, citing a need for "a more realistic appreciation of the values of humanistic-social science subjects ... in the interests of serving the general welfare."[1]

In recognition of Renne's service to Montana State College, the Montana State University named Renne Library in his memory.[4] Materials relating to Renne's unsuccessful 1964 gubernatorial campaign are held at Montana State University Archives and Special Collections.[5] Renne was named as one of Montana State's most important presidents in 2011, in an interview with three MSU historians--Jeffrey Safford, Pierce Mullen, and Robert Rydell—in the Bozeman Daily Chronicle.[6]

United States government service

From 1950 to 1951 Renne was the president of the Water Resources Policy Commission and in 1951 to 1953 he acted as chief of the Mutual Security Agency's Special Technological and Economic Mission to the Philippines. In 1958, he accepted the role of Chief of the Agricultural Survey Mission to Peru for the Joint International Bank for Reconstruction of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. In 1960, Renne became a consultant regarding land development for the U.S. Operations Mission to Ethiopia, and in 1961 he became a member of the National Advisory Council for Health Research Facilities, HEW.

Renne was the Assistant Secretary of Agriculture for International Affairs in Washington, D.C., and through an appointment issued by then U.S. President John F. Kennedy, he also served as Assistant Secretary of Agriculture for International Affairs from 1963 to 1964.[3] Renne also became one of the original board of trustees of the Philippine Rural Reconstruction Movement.[7]

By 1964 up to 1969,[8] he was Director of Office of Interior Water Resources Research, U.S. Department of the Interior, Washington D.C.[9] After leaving the Water Resources Research Office in 1969, he was chief of the Agricultural University Development in Illinois/USAID Team for India until 1972. In 1974, Renne was Director of the Foreign Trade Study at Montana State University.[3]

Political career

In February 1964, Renne resigned as president of Montana State College to run for Governor of Montana in 1964. He defeated Mike Kuchera in the Democratic primary, and advanced to the general election, where he ran against incumbent Governor Tim M. Babcock.[10] Babcock was running for re-election following his ascension to the Governorship in 1962 when the previous Governor, Donald Grant Nutter, died in a plane crash.[10]

In the election, Renne placed emphasis on economic development in response to the 1964 sluggish economy, a need of greater support for education, relief for property taxes, and tax programs based upon ability to pay tax to fund his educational programs. Democrats also asserted that a Republican administration would adopt a sales tax and the institution of right-to-work law.[10]

Republicans and Babcock denied any plans for a sales-tax or right-to-work law and placed their emphasis on Governor Babcock's business-like administration of reduced deficit and balanced budget without new taxes, current support for education and custodial institutions, and that agriculture was the only area of Montana's economy not prospering.[10]

The election results had Renne receiving 136,682 votes, and Babcock receiving 144,113 votes.[10]

Memberships

Renne was a member[11] of Rotary, American Economic Association, American Academy of Political and Social Science, Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Kappa Phi and Alpha Zeta.

Publications

Resources

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Rydell, Robert (1992). In The People's Interest: A Centennial History of Montana State University. Montana State Univ. pp. 59–71. ISBN 978-0-9635114-0-9.
  2. ^ a b c d Historical Note, Collection 2313 - Roland R. Renne Gubernatorial Campaign Papers, 1963-1966, Montana State University, lib.montana.edu
  3. ^ a b c Roland R. Renne, jfklibrary.org Archived May 6, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ "About Renne Library". Montana State University. Retrieved 6 July 2011.
  5. ^ "Collection 2313 - Roland R. Renne Gubernatorial Campaign Papers, 1963-1966 - MSU Library | Montana State University". www.lib.montana.edu. Retrieved 2022-04-18.
  6. ^ Writer, GAIL SCHONTZLER, Chronicle Staff (17 July 2011). "Presidential debate: Who were MSU's most important presidents?". Bozeman Daily Chronicle. Retrieved 2022-04-18.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  7. ^ Flavier, Juan M., Doctor to the Barrios, page 6.
  8. ^ "Water Resources News".
  9. ^ "Montana University System Water Center Legislative History". Archived from the original on 2011-06-14.
  10. ^ a b c d e Payne, Thomas (June 1965). "The 1964 Election in Montana". The Western Political Quarterly. 18 (2): 491–494. doi:10.2307/445294. JSTOR 445294. S2CID 188870830.
  11. ^ The Political Graveyard. "Economist Politicians". Retrieved 25 June 2011.

External links