The following bio on Henry Suzzallo is from Wikipedia:
Henry Suzzallo (August 22, 1875 – September 25, 1933) was president of the University of Washington from 1915 to 1926. He later served as director of the National Advisory Committee on Education and president of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching.
He was of Croatian descent, born in San Jose, California just after his parents' emigration from Dalmatia. Poor health in his youth resulted in mediocre grades during his primary and secondary education. He graduated from Stanford University in 1899, and went to Columbia University for graduate school, where he got his master's degree in 1902 and his Ph.D. in 1905. His focus was educational sociology. He was deputy superintendent of city schools in San Francisco, professor of education at Stanford, and professor of educational sociology at Columbia, before becoming president of the University of Washington in 1915.
During World War I, Suzzallo served as a chairman of the State Board of Defense, an advisor to the War Labor Board, and as a member of the Labor Industries Board. A labor dispute at the time concerned the eight hour workday in the logging and lumber industry, which Suzzallo favored and helped enact. Suzzallo's actions enraged lumberman Ronald H. Hartley, who was elected governor in 1924. In 1926, Hartley removed five of the seven members of the University of Washington's Board of Regents and replaced them with his own appointees. The new board shortly thereafter announced Suzzallo's "leave of absence" for no apparent reason. Enraged students threatened to strike, but were compelled not to upon Suzzallo's request.
After his dismissal from the University of Washington, Suzzallo became associated with the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, which he became president of in 1930.
He died in Seattle, Washington in 1933. Suzzallo Library, the University of Washington's central library, is named in honor of him.
The Henry Suzzallo Library was completed in 1926 by Carl F. Gould, Sr. and Charles H. Bebb, Seattle architects of national stature. The building is an example of the Collegiate Tudor Gothic style adopted by the University as part of the 1915 campus plan, also developed by Gould and Bebb.
Called the "soul of the University," Suzzallo Library was central to President Henry Suzzallo's vision of the UW as the "University of a Thousand Years." Ground was broken on April 14, 1923, for the building whose original triangular design called for a carillon tower over 300 feet high in the center of the triangle. The first wing, completed in 1926, faces the central plaza and includes the famous and well-loved reading room. The second, southeast wing was constructed in 1935 and followed the original plans of the architects. The exterior and interior of these two wings of the original design include rich and complex details, which contribute to the grandeur of the building.
The exterior is composed of sandstone, precast stone, terra-cotta and brick, with a slate roof. The windows are of leaded glass, with some stained glass. Eighteen sculptured terra-cotta figures in niches upon the exterior buttresses were selected by the UW faculty in 1923 to symbolize contributions to learning and culture. Allan Clark, a young sculptor from Tacoma, was commissioned by the UW Board of Regents to create the figures. From left to right, the figures represent Moses, Louis Pasteur, Isaac Newton, Leonardo da Vinci, Benjamin Franklin, Justinian, Herodotus, Adam Smith, Homer, Johannes Gutenberg, Ludwig von Beethoven, Charles Darwin and Hugo Grotius. Three heroic figures of cast stone depicting "Mastery," "Inspiration" and "Thought," also sculpted by Allan Clark, stand over the portals of the main entrance. Another detail in the facade is a series of shields, which are the coats of arms of various universities around the world.
Ever since it opened, the second floor reading room has inspired comparisons with the great library reading rooms of the world and is often compared to the nave of great cathedrals. Measuring 65 feet high, 52 feet wide, and 250 feet long, the reading room features a vaulted ceiling elaborately decorated with rich colored and gilded stenciling; oak bookcases topped with a hand-carved frieze representing native plants of Washington State; and tall windows with leaded glass incorporating 28 Renaissance watermark medallions. At each end of the reading room, a paneled alcove features a hanging lighted globe bearing the names of world explorers. Throughout the room, carved sandstone, wood paneling, and ironwork grills represent the craftsmanship employed in creating this space. It is truly a magnificent space.
There are 22 libraries run by the University of Washington, 20 of which are on the Seattle campus. They are run by more than 400 staff members and feature over 6 million volumes. Suzallo has 35 miles of shelving within it, and the Allen Library, which is connected to Suzallo, has 25 miles of shelving. The University spends over $35,000,000 a year on its libraries.