Wharton was elected president of
Michigan State University thereby becoming the first African-American president of a major U.S. university;
EAST LANSING — Clifton Wharton Jr., a former Michigan State University president whose name and memory are tied to MSU's Wharton Center, died Saturday.
He was 98, MSU’s president from 1970-1978, and a man of many firsts.
MSU President Kevin Guskiewicz and the Board of Trustees commemorated Wharton as the first Black president of a major U.S. public research university in a statement issued Sunday.
They said the Wharton Center for Performing Arts was named after Wharton and his wife, Dolores, after its completion in 1982 to honor the couple’s contributions and service to MSU.
“Clifton Wharton Jr.’s profound influence on Michigan State University persists through vital programs launched on his watch, including, notably, the capital campaign resulting in the magnificent performing arts center now bearing his name and that of his wife, Dolores," they said. “But, so fittingly for a leader in higher education, his focus on developing people might be said to be his most outstanding legacy. He declared at the outset that, ‘What is frequently required is not a pronouncement of leadership but rather encouragement of the individuals within the institution.’
"There are many who will attest to the impact of his focus on people, one of the many reasons he will long live in the hearts of Spartans.”
Wharton died in New York, where he was living, said Emily Guerrant, an MSU spokesperson. He is survived by his wife of 74 years and son Bruce.
An MSU legacy page credited Wharton for overseeing the building of MSU’s first superconducting cyclotron, the creation of the MSU Foundation and the launch of its first capital campaign, which made possible the construction of “Michigan’s largest performing arts center,” which was named after the Whartons.
“Among his colleagues, Wharton was respected for maintaining the quality of MSU’s academic programs despite budget constraints, as well as his commitment to educating the economically disadvantaged,” the legacy page said. “While he led MSU, the number of Rhodes Scholars rose, and two new colleges opened: the College of Urban Development and the College of Osteopathic Medicine.
Wharton steered the university during the final years of the Vietnam War and student protests, and he was known for being committed to engaging with students.
He was born in Boston, Massachusetts, on September 13, 1926, and enrolled at 16 at Harvard University, where he received a bachelor's degree in history, according to MSU's tribute pages. He also received degrees from the Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies and the University of Chicago.
In lieu of flowers or gifts, the family has established the
Dr. Clifton and Dolores Wharton Legacy Fund at Michigan State University.
Gifts to the legacy fund will go toward the Wharton Center's endowment fund to support the performing arts center.
Clifton Wharton Jr. was MSU's president 1970-1978. The Wharton Center is named after him and his wife.
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