This picture of Spring Grove, Pa.’s, Rhodes Scholar Bruce McClellan appeared with those of other borough servicemen in the window of George Lau’s grocery store. The family donated those pictures to the Spring Grove Area Historical and Preservation Society, and they’re available for public viewing at the society’s museum. Also of interest: Spring Grove museum displays horse gas mask and more.
York County has produced four known Rhodes scholars.
For months, my post on yorktownsquare.com has counted three.
But my recent assertion that there were three known Rhodes scholars with York County ties in a York Sunday News column brought forth another achiever – Spring Grove’s Bruce McClellan.
As it turns out, not only was McClellan a Rhodes Scholar, he served as president of the Association of Rhodes Scholars.
Ron Henry, part of a committed group of history preservationists in Spring Grove, sent along a piece in the Spring Grove Area Historical and Preservation Society’s “The Historical Ripplet” profiling McClellan.
As she has done so many times, Barbara Kling wrote the McClellan story in the November 2010 “Ripplet.”
Here are some facts about McClellan, according to the “Ripplet:”
- He was born in 1924, the son of William and Josephine McClellan. His father was brother in law of P.H. Glatfelter II.
- After serving as an Army Air Force pilot in World War II, he received a degree from Williams College and the Rhodes scholarship a year later.
- He spent most of his professional life as headmaster of the Lawrenceville School in New Jersey.
- He retired in 1986 after 27 years, telling the Trenton Times: “It feeds my spirit to teach.”
I’ve also reported that there is one known Nobel Prize winner with a York County background – J. Michael Bishop.
Am I missing any else?


I've been editor of the York (Pa.) Daily Record/Sunday News for 8 years and managing editor of the newspaper for 15 years before that. So, York Town Square explores the rapidly changing world of journalism. And I studied York/Adams' history in graduate school, have written six books about these fascinating southcentral Pennsylvania counties and serve on the York County (Pa.) Heritage Trust board. So, this blog deals with regional history. Often, journalism and history meet here. They're part of a continuum anyway. My hope is that this site intrigues readers on both accounts in giving a daily dose of journalism/history. Or history/journalism. Contact me at 


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