Title
Frank A. Rose, 1921-1991
Subject
University of Alabama
College presidents
Presidents of the University of Alabama
Description
Dr. Frank A. Rose, president of the University of Alabama from 1959 -1969, was a native of Meridian, Mississippi, and is recognized as one of the nation's leading educators.
Dr. Rose received his A. B. Degree from Transylvania College, his B. D. From Lexington Theological Seminary, and did graduate study at the University of London. His career in higher education began in 1945 when he became a Professor of Philosophy at Transylvania College. He was named president of his alma mater in 1951, becoming the youngest college president in the nation. The University of Alabama called him as its president in 1958.
With tact and diplomacy, Dr. Rose acted as the middleman in the June 1963 confrontation between Gov. George C. Wallace and the Justice Department of the Kennedy Administration. The university president, who described himself as neither a segregationist nor an integrationist but a realist, had vowed to help insure obedience to the laws and peace on the campus.
So when the Alabama Governor stood defiantly in front of a campus door and raised a hand against federalized troops, but stepped aside moments later, two black students were enrolled without further incident.
During Dr. Rose's tenure at the university, enrollment on the main campus almost doubled, and enrollment on all campuses climbed to 20,000. The graduate school increased tenfold, and the full-time faculty more than doubled. University assets of $50.6 million in 1958 climbed to $141 million, and the operating budget grew from $16.2 million to $60.3 million. Dr. Rose raised academic standards by recruiting highly-qualified faculty, raising entrance requirements for students, emphasizing programs for scholars, and appealing to outstanding students.
Dr. Rose was elected in 1955 by the United States Junior Chamber of Commerce as one of the "Ten Outstanding Young Men in America." In 1960, he was elected to the South's Hall of Fame for the Living.
Dr. Rose was National President of Omicron Delta Kappa, a group that awarded him its Distinguished Service Key in 1966. He was 1968 Chairman of the Board of Visitors, United States Military Academy, West Point, and was 1968 Chairman of the Educational Advisory Committee of the Appalachian Regional Commission.
He was a member and former president of the Southern University Conference, Regional Chairman of the March of Dimes, Chairman of the American University Field Staff Program, and a Member of the Executive Committee of the Southern Regional Education Board.
Dr. Rose served in 1959 as a Delegate to the Atlantic Congress of NATO for the United States Committee. He was a member of the National Citizen's Committee on Public Television, and a member of the Advisory Panel for ROTC Affairs, U.S. Army.
Dr. Rose held Honorary Degrees from the University of Cincinnati, the University of Alabama, Samford University, Transylvania College, Lynchburg College, St. Bernard College, and the University of the Americas in Mexico City.
Dr. Rose and his wife, Tommye, had four children, Susan, Tony, Julian, and Elizabeth. Rose died in 1991
Dr. Rose was inducted into the Alabama Academy of Honor on August 25, 1969.
Dr. Rose received his A. B. Degree from Transylvania College, his B. D. From Lexington Theological Seminary, and did graduate study at the University of London. His career in higher education began in 1945 when he became a Professor of Philosophy at Transylvania College. He was named president of his alma mater in 1951, becoming the youngest college president in the nation. The University of Alabama called him as its president in 1958.
With tact and diplomacy, Dr. Rose acted as the middleman in the June 1963 confrontation between Gov. George C. Wallace and the Justice Department of the Kennedy Administration. The university president, who described himself as neither a segregationist nor an integrationist but a realist, had vowed to help insure obedience to the laws and peace on the campus.
So when the Alabama Governor stood defiantly in front of a campus door and raised a hand against federalized troops, but stepped aside moments later, two black students were enrolled without further incident.
During Dr. Rose's tenure at the university, enrollment on the main campus almost doubled, and enrollment on all campuses climbed to 20,000. The graduate school increased tenfold, and the full-time faculty more than doubled. University assets of $50.6 million in 1958 climbed to $141 million, and the operating budget grew from $16.2 million to $60.3 million. Dr. Rose raised academic standards by recruiting highly-qualified faculty, raising entrance requirements for students, emphasizing programs for scholars, and appealing to outstanding students.
Dr. Rose was elected in 1955 by the United States Junior Chamber of Commerce as one of the "Ten Outstanding Young Men in America." In 1960, he was elected to the South's Hall of Fame for the Living.
Dr. Rose was National President of Omicron Delta Kappa, a group that awarded him its Distinguished Service Key in 1966. He was 1968 Chairman of the Board of Visitors, United States Military Academy, West Point, and was 1968 Chairman of the Educational Advisory Committee of the Appalachian Regional Commission.
He was a member and former president of the Southern University Conference, Regional Chairman of the March of Dimes, Chairman of the American University Field Staff Program, and a Member of the Executive Committee of the Southern Regional Education Board.
Dr. Rose served in 1959 as a Delegate to the Atlantic Congress of NATO for the United States Committee. He was a member of the National Citizen's Committee on Public Television, and a member of the Advisory Panel for ROTC Affairs, U.S. Army.
Dr. Rose held Honorary Degrees from the University of Cincinnati, the University of Alabama, Samford University, Transylvania College, Lynchburg College, St. Bernard College, and the University of the Americas in Mexico City.
Dr. Rose and his wife, Tommye, had four children, Susan, Tony, Julian, and Elizabeth. Rose died in 1991
Dr. Rose was inducted into the Alabama Academy of Honor on August 25, 1969.
Source
Tuscaloosa News Archive
Contributor
Betty Slowe (Description)
Type
Photograph
Identifier
971
Coverage
Tuscaloosa (AL)
Original Format
Photograph
Physical Dimensions
10 inches by 8 inches