William W. Fuller

    William W. Fuller, the present School Superintendent of Warrick County, is the youngest of four children born to Isham and Agnes (Wilson) Fuller, appropriate mention of whom is made in the biography of Hon. Benoni S. Fuller. He is a native  of this county, born July 29, 1857; was reared on the home farm until sixteen years old, when for one year he was a student at the Normal Institute at Oakland City, Gibson County, Indiana. During the year 1876 he taught school and attended high school at Worthington, Indiana, but in 1877 he returned to Oakland City and resumed his studies in the Normal. From that  time until 1880 he followed the teacher's profession in various townships of his native county, then entered the State University, where he remained two years, completing the sophomore term. Having been el4ected County Superintendent of Warrick County, he returned to Boonville, and June 8, 1881, began administrating  the duties of that office. Two years later he was re-elected and is now serving out his second term as one of Warrick County's best School Superintendents.

    In politics he is a Democrat, and besides being  a member of a secret college fraternity, belongs to the F. and A. M., and Knights of Pythias.

Source: History of Warrick, Spencer, and Perry Counties, Indiana, By: Goodspeed Bros. & Co., 1885.