Home Surname List Name Index Sources GEDCOM File Email Us | Fifteenth Generation5744. Charles Noah Shepardson was born on 11 January 1896 in Littleton, Arapahoe Co., Colorado, USA. He appeared in the census in 1910 in Fort Collins, Larimer Co., Colorado, USA. He appeared in the census in 1920 in Laramie, Albany Co., Wyoming, USA. Charles appeared in the census in 1930 in Brazos Co., Texas, USA. He immigrated in 1937 to New York, USA. He appeared in the census in 1940 in College Station, Brazos Co., Texas, USA. Charles lived in College Station, Brazos Co., Texas, USA in 1942. He died on 25 August 1975 at the age of 79 in Fort Collins, Larimer Co., Colorado, USA. He was buried in Grandview Cmtry., Fort Collins, Larimer Co., Colorado, USA. USA Social Security Death Index Shepardson served as dean of the School of Agriculture at Texas A&M from 1944 to 1955 and was head of the dairy husbandry department at the College Station school from 1928 to 1944. He had been an instructor at Colorado State University, then Colorado A&M, from 1920 to 1928, and was graduated from the Fort Collins school in 1917. He was born in Littleton, Colo. He served as the U.S. Delegate to the World Dairy Congress in Berlin in 1937 and in the 1940s and 1950s served as head of many dairy cattle organizations. Shepardson was chairman of the board of directors of the Houston branch of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas in 1955, and was a member of the board of governors of the Federal Reserve System in Washington, D.C. from 1955 to 1967. He served on a consulting basis since 1967. Shepardson earned his master's degree at Iowa State and his doctorate at CSU. He was instrumental in establishing a new CSU fund-raising foundation, and was named chairman of the foundation's board of trustees in 1974, The Shepardson Building in the agricultural school is named after him. Shepardson's wife, Lillian, died in 1973, and he has no survivors. Shepardson, a 1917 graduate of CSU and now a member of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System in Washington, D.C., also will be awarded an honorary Doctor of Laws degree by the school in recognition of his distinguished achievement. The graduates and faculty will begin gathering at 10 a.m. near Ammons Hall and the commencement program will start at 10:30 a.m. in the Oval. There are 79 candidates for bachelor's degrees and 60 students are candidates for master's degrees. An honor student and a three-times All-Conference football center at CSU, Shepardson went on to earn wide recognition as a leader in agriculture, economics and banking. Following his graduation from CSU in 1917, he served as an Army captain overseas in World War I. In 1919 he took a position as animal husbandman for the Wyoming University Extension department. Shepardson, a native of Littleton, returned to CSU as associate professor of animal husbandry from 1920 to 1928. In the meantime he received a master's degree in 1924 from Iowa State College. He was appointed head of the dairy husbandry department at Texas A&M College in 1928 and in 1944 he was named Dean of Agriculture at the college. He led a dairy development program in Texas at a time when the cotton industry was in economic distress and when there was an interest in dairying as a means of providing a better balanced farm program. His contribution of technical knowledge vital to the improvement of the agricultural program in Texas and neighboring states was recognized by his appointment in 1950 as a director of the Federal Reserve Bank and later by his appointment to the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. In four years on the latter assignment Shepardson has come to be regarded nationally as one of the outstanding members of the Board. Shepardson has held offices in a number of organizations. He served as chairman of the resident instruction section of the Association of Land Grant Colleges and Universities in 1947, from 1940 to 1943 he was director of the American Jersey Cattle Club. He was president of the Texas Dairy Products Assn. from 1942 to 1944. He also was a member of the Texas Board of Examiners for Teacher Education from 1953-55 and a member of the National Education Assn. He is on the Inter-American Committee for Dairy Industry, a member of the American Science Assn.; and in 1937 he was a U. S. delegate to the World Dairy Congress in Berlin. Shepardson and his wife set up in 1956 the Shepardson fund. Its purpose is to encourage young members of the CSU teaching staff to make their professional careers in teaching and to assist them in improving their competence as teachers. Charles Noah Shepardson and Jean Virginia "Nellie" Trammel were married on 19 August 1917 in Fort Collins, Larimer Co., Colorado, USA. Record Type: Marriage License Charles Noah Shepardson and Florence Redifer were married on 31 July 1923 in Larimer Co., Colorado, USA. Record Type: Marriage License Charles Noah Shepardson and Lillian E "Lillie" Ferguson were married on 17 April 1971 in Brazos Co., Texas, USA. Name Charles N Shepardson |