Andrew Warren Sledd was the last president of the University of Florida at Lake City. He was also president of Southern University from 1910 to 1914. He later became a professor and an influential biblical scholar at Emory University. He died of lung cancer in 1953, at the age of 89.
About Andrew Sledd in brief

The couple had three children, who are now in their late 80s and early 90s. They had one son, Andrew Warren, III, who is now the president of Theological seminary in Georgia. The family lives in Lynchburg, Virginia, and has two daughters, Frances and Frances Carey, who lives in New York City. The Sledds have four grandchildren, two sons and two step-granddaughters. They also have one great-great-grandson, Robert Warren Slesd, who also lives in Virginia. Sleedd was a member of Phi Delta Theta Fraternity; he was also the college’s outstanding student-athlete and was particularly known as the baseball team’s first baseman and star hitter. He earned a second Master of Arts degree in Greek from Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts in 1896, and completed one year’s additional graduate work toward a doctoral degree. While at Harvard, he played for the Harvard Crimson baseball team, and he is remembered as one of Harvard’s greatest athletes of the era. He left the college without finishing his undergraduate degree requirements, first accepting a position as a teacher in Durant, Mississippi, and then as the principal of a high school in Arkadelphia, Arkansas. In 1898, he was ordained as a minister and licensed to preach in 1898. In 1899, while traveling by train between Atlanta and Covington, Georgia, he witnessed the aftermath of the lynching of a black man named Hose.
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