
Having served on Cowley County Community College's
Board of Trustees for 22 years, and being a long-time supporter of Tiger
Athletics, Dr. Charles Kerr will be inducted into the Tiger Athletic
Hall of Fame on Feb. 7.
During Dr. Kerr's time on Cowley's Board of Trustees,
the institution grew dramatically in size and enrollment. The Charles
D. Kerr Business and Technology Building on campus was named in his honor
by the Board of Trustees. The dedication ceremony took place on Oct.
7, 1993.
Dr. Kerr's wife, Mary, said her late husband got a
great deal of enjoyment out of attending Tiger sporting events.
"He enjoyed being around all phases of the college," Mary
Kerr said.
Dr. Kerr died Oct. 14, 1998, at the age of 78.
During his time as a member of Cowley's Board of Trustees,
Tiger athletic teams flourished. The Cowley tennis team captured 16 Region
VI titles and two national championships (1989 and 1991). Women's basketball
won 10 Jayhawk Conference Eastern Division titles, and the men's basketball
team won four Jayhawk East titles. The volleyball team captured two conference
championships and a Region VI title, while setting school records for
consecutive victories (27) and in a season (43). The football team competed
in its only two bowl games in school history; and Cowley's softball team
won five Jayhawk East titles.
Cowley president, Dr. Pat McAtee, has fond memories
of Dr. Kerr.
"Charlie and his wife Mary were great supporters of
Tiger athletics," McAtee said. "He was a dyed in the wool Tiger. He was
one of the best board of trustee members with which I had the pleasure
to work with. He was a kind and gentle human being who had the utmost
integrity. I miss him greatly."
Kerr was a 1937 graduate of Mahaska rural High School,
where he played on the only six-man football team in the state of Kansas.
A veteran of World War II, he served four years with
the U.S. Army in England, France, Belgium, and Germany. Following discharge
in 1946, he married Mary Jane Graham on Dec. 28, 1949, at Mahaska.
Charles received his bachelors degree in social science
from the College of Emporia in 1951, and completed his masters degree
in school administration at Kansas State Teachers College in Emporia
in 1954. His first professional teaching assignment was with the Lathan
schools, where he served as elementary principal, teacher and coach.
The Kerrs later moved to Peabody, where he served as elementary principal
before being appointed superintendent of schools. He served as superintendent
at Peabody until 1961, when the family moved to Fayetteville, Ark., where
he completed his doctorate of education degree in 1963.
In 1962, the Kerrs moved to Winfield,
where Charles became professor of teacher education at Southwestern
College. He also served as chairman of the Division of Social Sciences
for three years. In 1970, he began employment at Winfield State Hospital & Training
Center as program director, and he wrote the original grant for the extremely
successful Foster Grandparent Program. He retired from WSH&TC in
1985, following 15 years service.
A member of First Presbyterian Church in Winfield,
he had served as a Ruling Elder for many years, and had served as Commissioner
to both the Presbytery and General Assembly.
He was a dedicated member of the Winfield Kiwanis
Club for more than 27 years, where he had served as president, Division
VII Lt. Governor, and Kansas Kiwanis Foundation Board member. He was
chairman and member of the Board of the American Red Cross several
terms, and had served as the local Red Cross military service contact
for a number of years. Charter Organization representative for the
Presbyterian Church Boy Scout Troop, he was honored with a Winfield
First Citizen Award in June 1997.