Difference between revisions of "Charles Watkins"

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When [[Jacob Spori]] resigned from Bannock Academy in 1891, Watkins was sent to replace him. He did not have the education or training that Spori had, but he worked hard to keep the school open and build upon the high standards Spori had set. Only Watkins and one other teacher kept the academy going, with Watkins serving both as teacher and administration. He resigned as principal in 1894 due to health problems, but he continued to teach until his death in 1896. He is buried in Paris, Idaho.
 
When [[Jacob Spori]] resigned from Bannock Academy in 1891, Watkins was sent to replace him. He did not have the education or training that Spori had, but he worked hard to keep the school open and build upon the high standards Spori had set. Only Watkins and one other teacher kept the academy going, with Watkins serving both as teacher and administration. He resigned as principal in 1894 due to health problems, but he continued to teach until his death in 1896. He is buried in Paris, Idaho.
  
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[[Category:Mormon Life and Culture]][[Category:Presidents of Brigham Young University–Idaho]]
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Watkins, Charles}}
 
{{DEFAULTSORT:Watkins, Charles}}

Latest revision as of 20:08, 19 February 2023

Charles Watkins.jpg

Charles Nephi Watkins was the principal of Bannock Stake Academy, now called Brigham Young University-Idaho. He was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

Watkins was born in 1855 in Nooselane, Willenhall, Stafford, England. His father moved the family to New York City soon after Watkins was born. His father then moved the family to St. Louis. Charles was eight years old when his father died.

Three years after his mother remarried in 1867, they moved to the Bear Lake area at the border of Idaho and Utah. In 1884, Watkins married Emily Horsley of Paris, Idaho (also in the Bear Lake area). They were the parents of four daughters.

When Jacob Spori resigned from Bannock Academy in 1891, Watkins was sent to replace him. He did not have the education or training that Spori had, but he worked hard to keep the school open and build upon the high standards Spori had set. Only Watkins and one other teacher kept the academy going, with Watkins serving both as teacher and administration. He resigned as principal in 1894 due to health problems, but he continued to teach until his death in 1896. He is buried in Paris, Idaho.