A son of
Charles Kittredge True, he was born at
Middletown, Connecticut. He graduated from
Wesleyan University in 1873, from which he also received his Sc.D. He was a teacher at
Westfield normal school in
Westfield, Massachusetts, for several years, did graduate studies at
Harvard in 1882-84, and served as an instructor at Wesleyan in 1884-88. At Wesleyan, he got to know
Wilbur O. Atwater, who in 1888 founded the
Office of Experiment Stations at the
United States Department of Agriculture (USDA). True went to work for the USDA in 1889, and from 1893 to 1915, he was director of the Office of Experiment Stations. In 1915, he became director of the States Relations Service, which the Office of Experiment Stations had become part of. He served in this role until 1923. True had charge of investigations in irrigation, drainage and human nutrition, and supervised the federal work and expenditures for agricultural experiment stations in all the states and in
Alaska and
Hawaii (both territories at that time) and
Puerto Rico and
Guam. He also supervised federal work and expenditures for co-operative extension work in agriculture and home economics throughout the United States under the
Smith-Lever Act of 8 May 1914, together with investigations in home economics and
agricultural education. In 1902 he was dean of the first graduate school of agriculture in the
United States, held at the
Ohio State University, and in 1914 he was president of the
Association of American Agricultural Colleges and Experiment Stations. In 1875, he married Emma Fortune. They had two children. ==Selected publications==