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George Washington Woodruff was born in Susquehannah County, Pennsylvania, on February 22, 1864. The son of Lewis H. Woodruff and Mella Glidden Woodruff, he received his early education at country schools in Pennsylvania and in Nebraska, Wilkes-Barre public schools and the Pennsylvania Normal School in Mansfield. He was fifteen years old when he began his first of three years teaching in rural Pennsylvania. He then attended Yale University, where he was a member of Psi Upsion, Phi Beta Kappa and Skull and Bones as well as a stellar athlete on the track, crew and football teams. After his graduation in 1889 he taught for several years at the Hill School and Penn Charter, both near or in Philadelphia.
After resigning as football coach in 1901, Woodruff began the practice of law. A Republican, Woodruff went on to serve in a number of other government positions, including Finance Clerk in Philadelphia, chief law officer in the Forest Service under his friend Gifford Pinchot, Acting Secretary of the Interior under President Theodore Roosevelt, Pennsylvania state attorney-general and public service commissioner, a federal judge for Hawaii, and acting Secretary of the Interior. Woodruff married Maud Donald Macbride in 1898, and then in 1921, Anna Ellfreda Foster. He died March 24, 1934. | |
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