LEWISTON — Keith W. Cunningham, 91, of Lewiston died Thursday, Oct. 12, at Hawthorne House in Freeport. He was born Aug. 23, 1926, in St. Albans, Maine, the son of Fernald M. and Lalia J. Cunningham.
Mr. Cunningham attended elementary and secondary school in St. Albans and Hartland and graduated from Hartland Academy in June 1944. He entered Bates College in Lewiston in September 1944 majoring in history and government, and received his Bachelor of Arts degree in 1948. Upon graduation he was elected to the Phi Beta Kappa Gamma Chapter, Bates College. He later earned his Master’s of Arts degree at Teachers College, Columbia University, New York, N.Y. He was elected to two honor societies at Columbia: Phi Delta Kappa and Kappa Delta Pi.
In September 1948 he accepted his first teaching position at Monson Academy in Monson, Maine, where he taught history. After three years he left Monson to teach history and social studies at Paris High School in South Paris. In 1955 he left Maine to work on his master’s degree at Columbia University, spending that year teaching at Samuel Staples Jr. High School in Easton, Conn. Mr. Cunningham returned to Maine in 1956 to accept the principalship of Paris High School. In 1961, SAD 17 was formed and Mr. Cunningham was the first principal of the Oxford Hills High School. At that time SAD 17 included only two towns, Norway and South Paris, but by 1967 it had grown to include eight towns and over 800 students. After February vacation in 1967, Mr. Cunningham welcomed his students to a new environment in the new Oxford Hills High School.
In the fall of 1967 Mr. Cunningham became president of Bliss College in Lewiston. At the closing of Bliss College in 1969 he became the principal of Telstar High School in Bethel.
In 1971 he joined the state of Maine, Department of Education as Teacher Education Advisor and director of Approval of Teacher Education Programs at the College level. He served six months on the New England Program for Teacher Education as representative of the State Department of Education.
He resigned from the State Department of Education in 1972 and became the principal of Lisbon High School in Lisbon Falls, remaining there for 12 years until 1984 when he retired after 36 years in education.
After he retired from teaching, he spent several years at G.M. Pollock Jewelry Store in Auburn as a salesman. Most of his retirement years were spent enjoying his home, gardening and traveling in the United States, Europe and Central America.
In writing his own obituary, Mr. Cunningham made special mention of several important people in his life: Elwood Gray, a lifelong friend from elementary school who was his frequent traveling companion, Maurice Levasseur, a special friend who helped him take care of his home, and Ethel Lacourse, his secretary during the years at Oxford Hills and a friend for over 50 years. Particularly important to Mr. Cunningham was Gordon Dunlop, his companion and caregiver for the last 10 years.
Mr. Cunningham is survived by two nieces, Sara J. Connor and her husband Donald of Topsham and Nancy L. Hemingway and her husband Stephen of Woolwich, great-nieces Anne Hemingway, Sarah Hemingway and Erin Connor, great-nephews Matthew Hemingway, Benjamin Connor, Adam Connor and Kevin Willis, great-great-nieces Caitlin Taylor and Miah Hemingway. He was predeceased by his parents, his brother Leland B. Cunningham, his sister Glenis J. Berry and his niece Sharon Willis.
Keith W. Cunningham
Keith W. Cunningham
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