CWRU Magazine - Winter 2003  |  D e p a r t m e n t s : - True Blue
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THROUGH THE YEARS
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As first demonstrated by Captain Heman Oviatt in the early years of Western Reserve College, endowed professorships are gifts that keep on giving.

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Professorships are one of the most lasting gifts that can be made to the University. While students, faculty, staff—and even buildings—may be on campus for only a finite period of time, an endowed professorship can provide a more permanent legacy of scholarship, teaching, and research. This is as true today as it was in 1826, when the Board of Trustees of Western Reserve College passed a resolution that would allow anyone to endow a named professorship with a gift to the school of $5,000.

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Lasting legacy: In 1837, Captain Heman Oviatt endowed what is now the oldest named professorship at CWRU.
In 1837, Western Reserve trustee Captain Heman Oviatt endowed what is now the oldest named professorship at Case Western Reserve University. Oviatt established the endowment with an initial bond of $10,000. He then raised an additional $3,000 from other donors and paid semi-annual interest for the professor’s salary.
Originally created as the Oviatt Professorship of Sacred Rhetoric in the Department of Theology, the professorship was first held by the Reverend Henry Nobel Day.

In 1853, the theology department was closed. To ensure that his endowment would continue, even as courses or departments might change, Oviatt wrote to the Board of Trustees on April 19, 1853: “In the present state of the College, and the prospect of students for years to come, it is desirable to use all reasonable economy in an effort to revive and carry on the College, I am wishing, and it seems to me desirable, that the Professors in the Theological Department should give instruction in the Collegiate Department, as the exigencies of the College may require. And I hereby express it as my desire that the Professors on my endowment give such instruction in the Collegiate Department.”

That year, the professorship was renamed the Oviatt Professorship of English, the title by which it still stands. Gary Lee Stonum is the current Oviatt Professor and chair of the Department of English.
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The Other First
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Almost fifty years after Heman Oviatt established his professorship, Laura Kerr Axtell donated $100,000 to establish the Levi Kerr Professorship in Mathematics at Case School of Applied Science in honor of her brother, Levi Kerr.

A cousin of Leonard Case Jr.’s, Kerr engaged in business and banking in Cleveland. In 1880, when Case died, Kerr became administrator of his estate, playing an important role in the establishment of Case School. A few years later, Kerr drowned in Florida. Because of his sister’s generosity, the Kerr legacy remains in the form of the professorship that bears his name.

John Stockwell was appointed as the first Levi Kerr Professor, in 1886. His tenure in the role—1886 to 1887—was short-lived, but his impact on the University was profound. At its founding, in 1880, Case School had appointed Stockwell as instructor of mathematics and astronomy, and asked him to organize both the faculty and the curriculum. He served as chief administrator until the appointment of the first president, Cady Staley. Stockwell was then named the Kerr Professor. In 1887, he resigned to pursue a full-time career in research and publishing. When he died, in 1920, he was referred to as the “Dean of American Astronomy.” At CWRU, he’s remembered for even more.

The Levi Kerr Professorship in Mathematics is currently held by James Alexander, chair of the Department of Mathematics.

In the many years since Oviatt and Axtell established endowments, many others have followed their lead. There are now more than 170 professorships endowed throughout the University. Each of these will ensure an enduring legacy by providing consistent streams of revenue to support instruction and research. red star

What's in a Name?
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Recently endowed professorships at Case Western Reserve University include the following:

The H. R. Horvitz Professorship in Family Business was established by the H. R. H. Family Foundation in 2001. The professorship is held by William Schulze.

The Arline H. and Curtis F. Garvin Research Professorship was established by the estate of Arline Garvin in 2001. Arline Garvin (NUR ’56) was an alumna of the Frances Payne Bolton School of Nursing. Curtis Garvin (ADL ’29, MED ’32) was an alumnus of Adelbert College and the Western Reserve School of Medicine and served on the faculty of the medical school between 1936 and 1972. The professorship is held by Pamela Bowes Davis.

In 2001, the estate of Arline Garvin established two other professorships: the Arline H. and Curtis F. Garvin Professorship in Nursing, which is held by Beverly Roberts (GRS ’84, nursing); and the Arline H. and Curtis F. Garvin Professorship in Nursing Excellence, held by Judith Maloni.

The Frederick C. Robbins MD Professorship in Child and Adolescent Health was established by family, friends, and colleagues of Frederick Robbins in 2001. The endowed chair is named in honor of Dr. Robbins, University Professor emeritus and medical school dean emeritus. Dr. Robbins shared the 1954 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine and is a past president of the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences. The professorship is held by Barbara Cromer.

The Carter Kissell Professorship in Urology was established with funds from a trust established by the late Carter Kissell, a friend of CWRU’s. The professorship is held by Jack Elder.

The Agnar Pytte Professorship in Physics was established in 2002 by the Sherman Fairchild Foundation. This appointment will be awarded to an eminent scholar whose interests complement current department strengths in condensed matter physics, particle theory, particle astrophysics, and cosmology. The professorship is named for Agnar Pytte, president emeritus of CWRU, who served the University from 1987 to 1999.

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Numerous ways exist to give to professorships at CWRU. The University will work with donors to establish a named endowment fund or to contribute to an existing fund. Gifts may be made with an outright gift of cash or securities, as a bequest, or through any number of planned-giving vehicles. For more information, call the Office of Development at 216/368-4352.

True Blue CWRU is dedicated to highlighting CWRU’s supporters and what their generosity allows the University community to achieve.

This installment of True Blue CWRU was written by Heidi Adams Cool, director of communications in the Office of University Programs and Events.

For more information on development programs and alumni activities and events, visit the development and alumni affairs website at www.cwru.edu/development/alum2/.

Photograph courtesy of University Archives

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