Richard Ratcliffe Farr

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Richard Ratcliffe Farr

Birthdate:
Death: October 10, 1892 (46)
Immediate Family:

Son of Richard Ratcliffe Farr and Margaret Conn Farr
Husband of Margaret Edith Farr

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About Richard Ratcliffe Farr

https://www.encyclopediavirginia.org/Farr_R_R_1845-1892

R. R. Farr was a member of the House of Delegates (1877–1882) and the state superintendent of public instruction (1882–1886). Born in Fairfax County, he served under John Singleton Mosby during the American Civil War (1861–1865) and then studied law. During his years in the General Assembly, he joined members of the Readjuster Party in working to refinance the antebellum public debt. As superintendent of the state's new system of public education, he increased the pace of building projects, expanded enrollment, and advocated for the needs of African American students. He also secured money for the training of both white and black teachers. During Farr's tenure the General Assembly established Virginia Normal and Collegiate Institute (later Virginia State University), the country's first state-sponsored college for African Americans, and the State Female Normal School (later Longwood University), the state's first school for training white women to become teachers. In 1888 President Benjamin Harrison appointed Farr U.S. marshal for the eastern district of Virginia. He died four years later at his Fairfax County estate.

Early Years

Richard Ratcliffe Farr was born on November 30, 1845, in Fairfax County and was the son of Richard Ratcliffe Farr, who died about ten weeks before he was born, and Margaret Conn Willcoxon Farr, who reared him and his elder brother. During the Civil War, he and his mother lived as refugees in Washington County after the Second Battle of Manassas in August 1862. On November 2, 1863, he enlisted as a private in Company B of the 43rd Virginia Cavalry Regiment, under the command of John Singleton Mosby. One year later Farr was severely wounded in the thigh, but he recovered and served until paroled in Winchester in April 1865.

Farr attended Roanoke College after the war but did not earn a degree. He returned to Fairfax County, where on April 18, 1870, the county court appointed him sheriff. Farr won election as county treasurer in November of that year, and he studied law and took his oath to practice in the county court on April 15, 1872. He also served twice as county surveyor and was active in several local organizations, including the Virginia State Grange of the Patrons of Husbandry. In Washington, D.C., on February 12, 1879, he married Margaret E. Malone. They had four sons and one daughter. About that time Farr built a large brick house called Five Chimneys in the part of the county that later became the city of Fairfax.

Superintendent of Public Instruction

An advocate of refinancing the antebellum public debt, Farr won election to a two-year term in the House of Delegates from Fairfax County in 1877. He served on the Committee on Schools and Colleges and the Committee on Claims. Reelected in 1879, he moved from the Committee on Claims to the more consequential Committee on Finance, and worked with other legislators in the new Readjuster Party, a coalition of whites and African Americans working to refinance the public debt. As the joint nominee of the county's Readjusters and Republicans, Farr was elected to a third term in 1881. He exchanged his seat on the Committee on Schools and Colleges for a seat on the Committee on Counties, Cities, and Towns and became chair of the Committee on Finance. A month later, on January 13, 1882, the Readjuster majority in the General Assembly elected Farr superintendent of public instruction over William Henry Ruffner, the incumbent who had done more than any other to create the state's public school system.

Refinancing the public debt and restoring funding to and reviving the public school system were the two top priorities of the Readjusters. Having taken part in the initial legislative steps to achieve the first, Farr then served for four years in the most critical position for achieving the second. With Readjuster Party support, he replaced nearly all of the state's county and city school superintendents with men sympathetic to the Readjusters' objectives and to the needs of the state's African American students. The General Assembly's reform of the state's finances enabled it to increase appropriations for public schools over the course of Farr's four-year term, which ended on March 14, 1886. He expanded and improved the school system, acquiring and constructing school buildings at an increased pace, hiring more teachers, and improving their pay. Enrollment grew during his tenure from about 172,000 white students and 85,000 black students in 1882 to 197,000 whites and 111,000 blacks in 1886.

Farr wrote often in the Educational Journal of Virginia to promote teacher education, shifting from ungraded to graded schools, a lengthened school year, improved school buildings, and access to free textbooks. He was emphatic throughout his tenure that African Americans receive an education equal in quality to that of white students. With cooperation from the Peabody Educational Fund, under the direction of J. L. M. Curry, he secured money with which to provide training for African American and white teachers. Always striving to improve the operation of public schools throughout the state, he instituted an annual conference to bring together all city and county school superintendents and high school principals. He also helped develop the Virginia Teachers' Reading Association to provide all of the state's teachers with a two-year reading course in educational theory and practice.

During Farr's first year as superintendent of public instruction, the General Assembly established Virginia Normal and Collegiate Institute (later Virginia State University), the country's first state-sponsored college for African Americans. In 1884 the assembly authorized the creation of the State Female Normal School (later Longwood University), the state's first for training white women to become teachers. Farr advocated proper education for all teachers, and he encouraged the state to support or sponsor summer institutes to improve teacher training. As a member of the state board of education he took part in the Readjusters' attempted overhaul of the board of visitors of the Medical College of Virginia (later part of Virginia Commonwealth University), the revision of the curriculum of the University of Virginia, and the change of administration and reform of Virginia Agricultural and Mechanical College (later Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University).

Later Years

With Readjuster Party leader William Mahone, Farr moved into the Republican Party in the 1880s and advised Mahone on local patronage before and after serving as superintendent of public instruction. Farr ran as a Readjuster for the House of Representatives in 1882, but lost after receiving only 38 percent of the vote. In 1888 he was slated to be a presidential elector for the unsuccessful candidacy of Republican Benjamin Harrison. In May 1889 the president appointed him U.S. marshal for the eastern district of Virginia, in which office Farr was serving when he died of consumption (probably tuberculosis) at Five Chimneys on October 10, 1892. He was buried in the town cemetery (later Fairfax City Cemetery).

Time Line

November 30, 1845 - R. R. Farr is born in Fairfax County.

November 2, 1863 - R. R. Farr enlists as a private in John Singleton Mosby's Confederate cavalry regiment.

April 1865 - R. R. Farr is paroled in Winchester after service in the Confederate cavalry.

April 18, 1870 - R. R. Farr is appointed sheriff in Fairfax County.

April 15, 1872 - R. R. Farr takes an oath to practice law in the Fairfax County court.

1877–1882 - R. R. Farr serves in the House of Delegates, representing Fairfax County.

February 12, 1879 - R. R. Farr and Margaret E. Malone marry in Washington, D.C. They will have four sons and one daughter.

1882 - About 172,000 white students and 85,000 black students are enrolled in Virginia public schools.

1882 - R. R. Farr loses in his run for the U.S. House of Representatives as a Readjuster.

January 13, 1882 - The General Assembly elects R. R. Farr the state superintendent of public instruction.

October 30, 1884 - The State Female Normal School opens in Farmville.

1886 - About 197,000 white students and 110,000 black students are enrolled in Virginia public schools.

March 14, 1886 - R. R. Farr's four-year term as state superintendent of public instruction ends.

May 1889 - President Benjamin Harrison appoints R. R. Farr U.S. marshal for the eastern district of Virginia.

October 10, 1892 - R. R. Farr dies at his Fairfax County estate, Five Chimneys.

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Richard Ratcliffe Farr's Timeline

1845
November 30, 1845
1892
October 10, 1892
Age 46