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Honors Institute Renamed After
Michigan Statesman Prentiss M. Brown
1911 Graduate Was Albion's Sole U.S.
Senator
Posted Friday,
August 27, 2004

ALBION, Mich. –
Albion College has renamed its Honors Institute the Prentiss M. Brown
Honors Institute in memory of the 1911 Albion graduate and United States
Senator from Michigan who was integrally involved in the development and
operation of the Mackinac Bridge.
Albion President Peter Mitchell made the announcement last night
[Thursday, August 26] during the annual William K. Stoffer Lecture at the
College’s Opening Convocation. Beginning this fall, the Institute and its
home on campus—the College’s historic Observatory—will bear Brown’s name.
“We are enormously grateful to
Senator Brown’s family, led by his son, Prentiss M. Brown, Jr., of the
Albion College Class of 1948, and his wife, Peggy, for their generous
contributions toward the endowment of the Prentiss M. Brown Honors
Institute,” Mitchell said in his remarks last night. “The Brown family’s
ties to Albion
College are longstanding. Beginning with
Senator Brown, more than 30 family members have attended
Albion.”
“Their gifts, provided as part of our current capital campaign, represent
another important step in making
our vision, ‘Liberal Arts at Work,’ a reality,” Mitchell continued.
The Brown family’s major commitment will support Honors Institute
programming for many years.
Lisa Lewis, associate professor of chemistry and the director of the
Honors Institute said the Brown family contributions will help further the
programming and goals of the honors Institute.
“The Brown family commitment helps us to fully implement those programs
which up to this point we have not been able to do in the Honors
Institute,” Lewis said. “These are strong initiatives that will only
strengthen the Honors students’ experience at Albion College. The members
of the Institute and I are grateful to the Brown family for their generous
support of our program and the College over the years.”
The only U.S. Senator among Albion College alumni, Brown served in the
Senate for seven years beginning in 1936. He was a College trustee from
1938 until 1966, when he became an honorary trustee. Brown received an
honorary degree from the College in 1937.
His son, Prentiss Brown, Jr.,
(right) is an
attorney and businessman in St. Ignace. He has continued his father’s
legacy of leadership at Albion, currently serving as a trustee.
Several Brown family members traveled from St. Ignace and other areas to
be present for the announcement, made prior to last night’s Stoffer
Lecture on Albion’s
Quadrangle. In a speech to more than 2,500 students, parents, staff, and
Albion community members, veteran journalist Sam Donaldson gave his take
on “The View from Washington.”
During a career in public office that began in 1914, Brown was at one time
the only Democrat serving as a prosecuting attorney in the state. A
financial expert, he served two terms in the U.S. House of Representatives
before being elected to the U.S. Senate, where he served as Whip of the
Senate and on the Senate Appropriations Committee. During his tenure on
Capitol Hill, Brown championed the rights of consumers, small businesses,
and “the little man.”
Brown’s leadership was not limited to the U.S. Congress. He also served as
director of the Office of Price Administration under President Franklin
Roosevelt, having drafted the legislation for the office while in the
Senate. He then served as chairman of the Detroit Edison Company and as a
successful attorney and banker in his hometown of St. Ignace. Senator
Brown led the efforts to construct the bridge between Michigan’s Upper and
Lower
Peninsulas, a feat that continues to be
considered one of the modern marvels of engineering, entrepreneurship and
cooperation.
A lifelong resident of St. Ignace, he was appointed chair of the Mackinac
Bridge Authority in 1950—seven years before the bridge’s official opening.
Spearheading the project from dream to reality, Brown chaired the Bridge
Authority until his death in 1973. It wasn’t until Brown was appointed to
chair the Bridge Authority that the funding and plans began to take shape.
In 1952, with Brown intensely lobbying elected officials, the state
legislature authorized the Bridge Authority to bond, build, and operate a
toll bridge. The bridge opened officially in 1957.
Brown recounted the long road to building the 8,616-foot suspension bridge
in his 1956 “The Mackinac Bridge Story,” published by Wayne State
University Press.
A national and regional leader in academics, technology, the arts and
athletics, Albion College is dedicated to
improving the human condition by educating the leaders of tomorrow.
Founded more than 165 years ago in
Albion, Mich., the College
is committed
to the theme of “Liberal Arts at Work.” With 50 percent of its alumni
making gifts to the college,
Albion is ranked 16th
nationally among all colleges and universities in the percentage of alumni
who donate to their alma maters.
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