David Fuller
David Stanley Fuller was principal of the Stratford Collegiate Institute and for 20 years before that a teacher of mathematics.
Born in Lambton County near Forest, Mr. Fuller was a son of a well-known fruit farmer, the late J.C. Fuller. His early education was received in the Public and High Schools of Forest. He was granted his Bachelor of Arts Degree from the University of Toronto in 1917 and the following year was awarded his Master's degree from the university. After graduation from the Ontario College of Education he joined the staff of the Stratford Collegiate where he spent his full career as teacher and principal.
Mr. Fuller is widely known throughout the province for his leadership in educational matters. In 1930 and 1936 he was secretary of the Mathematics and Physics Section of the Ontario Educational Association, and the following year became president of that section. For eight years he was a member of the Board of Governors of the University of Western Ontario, retiring in 1948.
Stanley Fuller will be best remembered by his colleagues throughout the province for the untiring and unselfish service he rendered to the Ontario Secondary School Teachers' Federation. For several years previous to 1935 he served on the Provincial Executive and in that year became president. He was an authority on superannuation problems and continually worked for the improvement of the pension scheme.
Not only concerned with academic education in which he was regarded as highly efficient and a good administrator, Mr. Fuller gave leadership to school athletics in Stratford. For six years he coached the Collegiate soccer team during which period the team won the Hough Cup three times in keenly contested Western Ontario Secondary Schools contests. Taken from Find a Grave: