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C. I. Pontius

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C. I. Pontius
File:C. I. Pontius
Clarence I. Pontius, 1951
Born
Clarence Isaiah Pontius

Butler, Butler County, Pennsylvania
Died(
Tulsa, Oklahoma
Other namesClarence I. Pontius, Cy Pontius
Occupation(s)businessman, banker, university president
Years active1915-1955
Known forPresident of University of Tulsa

Early life

Clarence Isaiah Pontius (1892-1956), more commonly identified as Clarence I. Pontius, C. I. Pontius or Cy Pontius, was born in Butler County, Pennsylvania on December 1, 1892.[a] He then enrolled in Ohio State University, graduating in 1915 with a degree in agriculture, and told his phi delta theta fraternity brothers that he intended to become a farmer.[1][http://www.phideltathetaarchive.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/1935-36_vol60_no1-5.pdf Savage, Royce H."U. of Tulsa Picks Phi Delt President." The Scroll of Phi Delta Theta Archive for February 1936. pp. 175-177.

Career

Businessman in Ohio

Instead of becoming a farmer, Pontius relocated to Warren, Ohio, where he became a businessman who spent the next fifteen years years organizing financial companies. For fourteen years, he was the executive officer of the Trumbull National Farm Loan Association, which was connected with the Federal Land Bank of Louisville, Kentucky (serving Kentucky, Ohio, Indiana and Tennesee. In 1920, while remaining with Trumbull, he organized VaUey City Mortgage and Loan Company, and served as treasurer, manager and president until 1930.{{Other ventures that Pontius worked in Ohio included: several joint stock land banks, building and loan companies, and insurance companies [1]

Businessman and University president in Oklahoma

Probably attracted by the oil boom in Oklahoma, [b] He resigned from his business affiliations and sold his financial holdings in Ohio so he could move to Tulsa in 1930, where he became a very successful investment banker. He first went to work as a special representative for the First National Company, an affiliate of the First National Bank and Trust Company. Later that year, he organized a financial company known as Public Securities Corporation of Tulsa, becoming its president in 1932. During this period, Pontius also became very involved in civic affairs of Tulsa (see section below). <refname = "PDT31"/>

In mid-1935, a delegation of men representing Tulsa University (TU) came to Pontius' office and expressed their interest in having him consider becoming president of TU. Knowing that such institutions hardly even chose a businessman to lead a college or university, Pontius replied that he felt very flattered by their interest, but said, "... I can't accept. I am a businessman, a banker, not an educator." The leader of the delegation said, "That is why we want you. We have the men to handle the educational policies of the university. We want a man to handle its business affairs, to be its executive head."Cite error: There are <ref> tags on this page without content in them (see the help page).

The meeting adjourned when the committee realized that Pontious had not been persuaded to withdraw his rejection. However, after he promised to reflect upon what they had said, all agreed to meet the following week to hear his final decision.


recruited  him to put his name into consideration for the presidency of Tulsa University (TU), whose very existence was threatened with dire financial straits. Pontius accepted the offer and served as president until 1958, then became chancellor until 1963.<refname ="ohf">[https://oklahomahof.com/member-archives/p/pontius-ci-1951 Oklahoma Hall of Fame: "C. I. Pontius 1951." He not only is credited with saving the school from bankruptcy and putting it on a sound financial basis, but was the longest-serving president in TU's history.</ref>

Personal and family life

Pontius married Ruth Elizabeth Birch of Springfield, Ohio in 1922. She was the daughter of T. Bruce Birch, a professor of philos.ophy at Wittenberg College in Springfield. The Pontiuses had two children - daughter Betty Jane and son Clarence Birch.<refname = "PDT31"/>


Civic activities and memberships in Tulsa

Aside from performing his duties as school president, Pontius involved himself in other civic activities. For example, he served on the Tulsa Chamber of Commerce Board of Directors, and was on the Board of Directors of the Tulsa-based International Petroleum Exposition. He was appointed to the original Oklahoma State Coordinating Board for Higher Education and the committee which created the Board of Regents for Higher Education. He also was vice president of the Oklahoma Industrial College Foundation and on the board Oklahoma Frontiers of Science.<refname ="ohf"/> A member and trustee of the First Methodist Episcopal Church in Tulsa,[c] he has been chairman of the finance committee of the Official Board. He was a member and chairman of the Tulsa County Council of the Boy Scouts of America and a member and program director of the Tulsa Young Mens' Christian Association (YMCA). Some of Pontius' other public activities included participating in: Knights Templars, Masons (32nd degree), Rotary Club, Shriners, and Tulsa Chamber of Commerce.<refname = "PDT31"/>

Awards and Honors

  • Oklahoma Governor’s Award for Outstanding Public Service (1942).
  • Tulsa’s Man of the Year (1949).
  • Admitted to the Oklahoma Hall of Fame (1951)


Notes

  1. ^ Little information is available about his childhood. Savage's biography of Pontius named both the town of Butler and the census-designated place of Chicora, Pennsylvania as the location of his birth. Savage also wrote that young Pontius had performed college preparatory work at Northfield Mount Hermon School in Gill, Massachusetts.
  2. ^ According to Savage, Pontius later told friends that he had always wanted to "go west." He had also admitted that "...he knew no one in Tulsa before he moved there."[1]
  3. ^ Now known as First United Methodist Church of Tulsa.


References

  1. ^ a b c Cite error: The named reference PDT31 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).

See also

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