Appointed president of Connecticut Agricultural College in 1930, McCracken played a pivotal role in the institution's transformation, leaading to its renaming as Connecticut State College in 1933, following a long campaign by students, faculty, and alumni. During McCracken's tenure, the state college shifted toward a more comprehensive
liberal arts curriculum, resulting in a doubling of graduate programs and establishing new departments of music, government, philosophy, agricultural engineering, and psychology. Additionally, the college joined the
New England Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools and the
Association of State Universities in 1930 and celebrated its fiftieth anniversary in 1931. Enrollment increased and finances improved despite the economic impact of the
Great Depression. However, despite these accomplishments, McCracken proved unpopular with faculty and eventually lost the trust of the college's trustees and state legislators. Consequently, he resigned in 1935 to become director of the Board of Christian Education of the
Presbyterian Church in
Philadelphia. == Later life and death ==