Justus K. Jillson | |
---|---|
1st South Carolina Superintendent of Education | |
In office July 6, 1868 – December 14, 1876 | |
Governor | Robert Kingston Scott Franklin J. Moses, Jr. Daniel Henry Chamberlain |
Preceded by | Office established |
Succeeded by | Hugh Smith Thompson |
Personal details | |
Born | 1839 Gardner, Massachusetts |
Died | 1881 Springfield, Massachusetts |
Cause of death | Suicide |
Political party | Republican |
Justus Kendall Jillson (1839–1881) was an American educator and politician. He served as South Carolina Superintendent of Education and in the South Carolina Senate. He was a Republican.
Jilson was born in Gardner, Massachusetts, in 1839, to parents Mary and Sylvester Jillson. His brothers were Henry and Leander. Jillson married Ellen Gates in 1858.[1][2] He moved from Massachusetts to South Carolina in 1866 to teach for the Freedmen's Bureau.[3] He served four terms from 1868 until 1876 as South Carolina Superintendent of Education, head of the South Carolina Department of Education,[4] and was the first to hold the title.[5] He reportedly struggled with corruption in state government.[6] Jillson was a member of the South Carolina Senate from 1868 to 1871,[7] and chaired the education committee.[8] During his political career, Jilson was affiliated with the Republican Party.[9][10]
He issued the first Annual Report of the State Superintendent of Education of the State of South Carolina to the Governor of South Carolina and state legislature.[11] His efforts at integration included a deaf school. Its leaders resigned instead of accepting African American deaf students.[12]
Jillson moved to Springfield, Massachusetts, in 1876 and died by suicide in 1881.[1][2]