|
COOKEVILLE, Tenn. (Dec. 12, 2005) – Politics isn’t the only
thing Cookeville couple and former mayors Bobby and Jean Davis have in
common. They’re both long-time supporters of Tennessee Tech University’s
School of Nursing as well.
For their contribution to a recent campaign to raise $21 million for
the construction of a new facility, the Davis legacy will be memorialized
in the naming of the new building’s Student Health Services waiting
room.
“Both as mayors and healthcare professionals, Bobby and Jean Davis
have shown continued interest in the wellbeing of our community, and their
support of this project will contribute directly to the health of the
entire Upper Cumberland region by helping TTU increase its number of nursing
graduates,” said Tom Hamilton, vice president of University Advancement.
Bobby, who retired from a 40-year career as a pharmacist, and Jean, a
retired nurse who once worked as nursing supervisor at the Putnam County
Health Department and as director of TTU’s Student Health Services,
say their support of TTU’s School of Nursing “just comes naturally.”
Bobby was a charter member and the first president of the School of Nursing
Foundation, now called the SON Development Council, and Jean was a charter
member and early president of the Friends of the School of Nursing Auxiliary,
which no longer exists today but which helped the program in its early
years increase its scholarship funding significantly.
For those and other factors, the couple earned the university’s
1998 Outstanding Service Award.
In addition, both of them and their two children counted on TTU for portions
of their education. Bobby received pre-pharmacy training at the university
before attending pharmacy school at the University of Tennessee in Memphis,
and the couple’s daughter followed in her father’s footsteps.
Jean, a UT Memphis nursing graduate, earned her master’s degree
in psychology and educational counseling from TTU, and their son earned
a bachelor’s degree in chemistry.
“When I was working toward earning my bachelor’s degree,
a nursing school for Tennessee Tech had probably never even been imagined,
but we’ve supported the program since plans for it were first being
formulated,” Jean said.
“We knew it would benefit our entire region by helping bachelor’s-level
nursing students get a proper education without having to go so far from
their homes, and that’s why it’s so important to have the
best facility available to provide that education,” she continued.
It was the couple’s political experiences, however, that gave them
a broader understanding of how first TTU and then its nursing program
are interconnected with all other segments of the community infrastructure.
Bobby served as mayor from 1967 to 1973, prior to the creation of the
School of Nursing in 1980. Jean served as mayor from 1994 to 1998.
“It becomes evident how all areas of the community impact each
other, and during Jean’s term of office, we really saw how vital
TTU’s School of Nursing is to enhancing the quality of healthcare
throughout not just Cookeville, but the entire Upper Cumberland region,”
Bobby said.
Jean agreed, saying, “We saw how critical it is to the success
of our community healthcare system because qualified nurses enable our
hospitals and our physicians to further enhance their services.”
Both say that possibly their greatest service to the university has been
their opportunity to inform others — some in greater positions of
power — about the institution’s needs and goals.
“We’ve been fortunate that our professional and political
experiences have given us so many wonderful opportunities to cultivate
others’ interest in the university’s needs and goals,”
Bobby said.
“It takes everyone working together — contributing their time,
talent, skill, resources or whatever they have to offer — to make
something like this a success, and we’re just one tiny cog in the
big wheel of people who’ve contributed to this fundraising effort,”
Jean said.
In addition to contributions from private donors like the Davis family,
state and federal grants — including an allocation of $15.4 million
in the Tennessee Legislature’s $26 billion state budget approved
in June — have helped the university secure adequate funding for
the construction of the new building.
It will be the first constructed specifically to house the 25-year-old
academic program.
The university could begin accepting bids from potential contractors
as soon as early next year, ground could be broken as early as next April,
and the project could possibly be completed in as little as 18 months
following the groundbreaking.
--Tracey LeFevre
This information posted 19 December 2005
|