Ohio History Journal




490 Ohio Arch

490     Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications

 

DR. JACOB ALBRIGHT SHAWAN.

Dr. Jacob A. Shawan, for many years recognized as

one who had attained high place among educators of

Ohio, died at his home near DeGraff, Logan County,

Ohio, May 4, 1927. He was born in Wapakoneta, June

15, 1850; was reared on a farm; educated in the public

schools of Urbana, Ohio; and was graduated from

Oberlin College in 1880. He received his M. A. degree

from Oberlin College in 1883, and the honorary degree

of Ph. D. from Muskingum College in 1894.

Dr. Shawan taught in the Pretty Prairie District,

Urbana Township, before entering Oberlin College, and

in Mad River Township in Champaign County. In

1880, he was appointed superintendent of the schools at

St. Marys, Ohio. In 1833, he became superintendent of

schools in Mt. Vernon, Ohio. In 1889, he was called to

the superintendency of the schools of Columbus, Ohio,

a position which he held for twenty-seven years and

from which he retired at his own request in 1916.

Dr. Shawan's long service as superintendent of the

Columbus schools forms an era in the educational prog-

ress of the capital city of Ohio. When this service

began the schools of the city were conducted in twenty-

three buildings and the pupils numbered 11,000. When

he retired, there were fifty-six schools with 29,000 pupils

attending.

In the schools of Columbus, Dr. Shawan inaugu-

rated manual training, domestic science, the kinder-

garten schools, and the open air school. The latter was

established in cooperation with the Columbus Society

for the Prevention and Cure of Tuberculosis. He was



Reviews, Notes and Comments 491

Reviews, Notes and Comments      491

a strong advocate of health inspection in the public

schools which was introduced in his administration.

In his twenty-seven years' service in Columbus he

became widely acquainted and his memory is cherished

for his kindly manner and brief but helpful addresses

on his visits to the various school rooms. Every pupil

in Columbus regarded Dr. Shawan as his friend and

felt free to speak to him when meeting him on the

street.

On retiring from the superintendency of the Colum-

bus schools, Dr. Shawan and his wife resided in De-

Graff, Ohio. Later they moved to his farm, "The Mead-

ows," where he died. He is survived by three sons:

Dr. H. K. Shawan, surgeon, of Detroit, Michigan; R. F.

Shawan, of Columbus, Ohio, and J. A. Shawan, Jr., of

DeGraff. Mrs. Shawan was Miss Jennie K. Holmes,

prior to her marriage to Mr. Shawan, in 1881. She died

in 1925.

Dr. Shawan was a Methodist and a Mason. He was

a member of state and national educational associations

and a life-member of the Ohio State Archaeological and

Historical Society.

 

SARCOPHAGUS OR MUMMY CASE

Professor G. Foucart, Director of the French Insti-

tute of Archaeology, at Cairo, Egypt, was one of the few

honored by being permitted to witness the official open-

ing of the marble sarcophagus of King Tut-Ankh-

Amen, near Luxor, Egypt, on February 12, 1924. He

made the translations of the inscriptions on the coffin

enclosing the mummy presented by Dr. Howell. Such

a coffin is usually called a mummy case, but Professor

Foucart calls this one a "sarcophagus," with the added

phrase, "properly so called."