George W. Gore

Dr. George W Gore
Gore in 1968
President of
Florida A & M University
In office
1950–1968
Preceded byH. Manning Efferson
Succeeded byBenjamin L. Perry, Jr.
Personal details
Born(1901-07-11)July 11, 1901
Nashville, Tennessee
DiedSeptember 13, 1982(1982-09-13) (aged 81)
Nashville, Tennessee
Alma materDePauw, Harvard, Columbia

George William Gore (July 11, 1901- September 13, 1982) was President of Florida A & M University from 1950 to 1968, FAMU's second longest serving president after John Robert Edward Lee. He oversaw the institution's transition from Florida A&M College (FAMCEE) to Florida A&M University and resisted an encouraged merge with Florida State University. The Gore Education Complex at FAMU, and the nearby street, Gore Avenue, are named for him.

Gore received a bachelor's degree in English and journalism from DePauw. He then earned a master's from Harvard and A Ph.D. from Columbia. He joined the faculty of Tennessee A&I as a journalism instructor and later spent 23 years as dean before coming to FAMU. While at Tennessee he conceived of the idea of Alpha Kappa Mu honor society.