Other members of the commission included agricultural scientist and sociologist Kenyon L. Butterfield, forester Gifford Pinchot, and future U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Henry Cantwell Wallace.
He was president of the Rhode Island College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts (1903-1906); the Massachusetts Agricultural College (1906-1924), and the Michigan Agricultural College, (later Michigan State College of Agriculture and Applied Science, which is now Michigan State University) from 1924 to 1928.
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Butterfield Hall at the University of Rhode Island, Butterfield House at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and Butterfield Hall of the Brody Complex at Michigan State University are all dedicated in his name.
Kenyon College | Paul Butterfield | Butterfield Overland Mail | Billy Butterfield | Kenyon | Deborah Butterfield | Daniel Butterfield | William Butterfield | Herbert Hollick-Kenyon | William Kenyon-Slaney | Peter Kenyon | Kenyon, Minnesota | Jane Kenyon | Herb Butterfield | Don Kenyon | Stewart Butterfield | Sherrilyn Kenyon | Rod Kenyon | Peter Butterfield | Lloyd Kenyon, 3rd Baron Kenyon | Lloyd Kenyon, 1st Baron Kenyon | Kenyon, Warrington | Herbert Butterfield | G. K. Butterfield | Dean H. Kenyon | Cushie Butterfield | William C. Kenyon | Sir Henry Kenyon Stephenson, 1st Baronet | Oak Grove Butterfield Stage Station | Kenyon Taylor |
He was elected in November 2002 as a Republican, defeating incumbent G. K. Butterfield.
G. K. Butterfield (George Kenneth Butterfield, Jr., born 1947), U.S. Representative from North Carolina