Fundraising effort that ended in 2015
is the largest in university history
MURFREESBORO — Middle
Tennessee State University raised more than $105 million in its Centennial
Campaign, surpassing the $80 million goal set when the effort was announced in
2012, officials announced Friday (Feb. 12).
The
$105,465,308 raised during the campaign, which concluded on Dec. 31, represents
the largest fundraising effort in university history, far surpassing a $30
million campaign mark that was set in 2001.
“We
launched this campaign in the middle of one of our nation’s biggest economic
downturns and set a goal that many thought we could never reach under the best
of circumstances,” President Sidney A. McPhee said Friday during an event at
Embassy Suites Murfreesboro to unveil the campaign’s results.
“The
fact that we met — and exceeded — our goal speaks to the commitment of the
campaign’s volunteer leadership, the passion of our alumni and the vision we
set forward for the future of our great university.”
Gov.
Bill Haslam, praised the University in video remarks played at Friday’s event,
noting,
“The
momentum from this campaign will guarantee the continued growth and success for
MTSU. It will help assure that MTSU will continue to prosper as a nationally
acclaimed, comprehensive university.”
Haslam
also lauded “MTSU’s leadership in student success initiatives, adult degree
completion, creative partnerships and outreach to veterans and military
families” for helping in the Drive to 55, the state’s initiative to increase
the percentage of Tennesseans with post-secondary credentials.
Watch
the video of Haslam’s full remarks at http://youtu.be/qB1MTSrH6EE.
The
Centennial Campaign was launched on Jan. 1, 2009, as MTSU prepared to mark the
100th anniversary of its 1911 founding. More than $54 million was
raised during a three-year “quiet phase” of the campaign, which alone set a
university record.
MTSU
went public with the campaign on April 13, 2012, declaring a goal of $80
million and unveiling a $10 million gift by alumnus Andrew Woodfin “Woody”
Miller of Nashville. Miller’s gift allowed MTSU to purchase the property once
occupied by then-Middle Tennessee Medical Center just west of the campus on
Bell Street.
Joe
Bales, vice president for university advancement and MTSU’s chief development
officer, said the $105 million was the result of more than 111,000 separate
gifts from 23,276 different donors.
“This
campaign was about more than dollars and donors,” Bales said. “It was about
creating a vision for our university’s second century and giving our friends
and supporters opportunities to help bring that vision to life.”
McPhee
said many of MTSU’s most transformational gifts came about during the
campaign’s four -year public phase, including the $7 million in private-donor
support necessary to augment public funds for the $147 million,
state-of-the-art Science Building that opened in October 2014.
Other
successes of the Centennial Campaign include more than $27 million in new
scholarship funds; a $2.5 million gift by alumnus Joey Jacobs, matched by the
state of Tennessee, creating an endowed chair of excellence in accounting — the
first new chair of excellence in Tennessee in more than 15 years, and the
establishment of $28 million in planned estate gifts to provide support for
many years to come.
Centennial
Campaign projects in MT Athletics included the Jeff Hendrix Stadium Club that
opened in 2012 and the Adams Tennis Complex that MTSU opened in 2015, built in
partnership with the city of Murfreesboro and the Christy Houston Foundation.
Campaign
chair Pamela Wright, founder and CEO of Nashville-based Wright Travel, said she
was proud to be a part of such a transformative effort for her alma mater.
“We
began this campaign as an opportunity to think about – and do something about —
the future of Middle Tennessee State University,” Wright said. “Those who
stepped forward in this effort have set our course for MTSU’s second century.”
Other
executive committee members included Nashville-based Zycron Inc. founder and chair
Darrell Freeman; Nashville-based Haury & Smith Contractors, Inc. chair
Stephen B. Smith; Rutherford County Mayor Ernest Burgess; Joey Jacobs, chair
and CEO of Franklin-based Acadia Healthcare; and MTSU Foundation member Don
Witherspoon.
Bales
said the campaign exceeded its goal because of the work by Wright, her
executive committee and other MTSU advocates.
“This
record-setting, history-making effort was a success because of the passion and
commitment of our volunteer leadership,” Bales said.
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