David Porter remembered with humor, love
Approximately 450 people gathered at 麻豆破解版鈥檚 Arthur Zankel Music Center Friday, April 8, to remember and celebrate David H. Porter, 麻豆破解版鈥檚 fifth president, who died March 26. In words and music, a group of distinguished guests recalled Porter the friend, father, scholar, musician, teacher and college president with humor and deep affection.
An essay by the Porter family published in the program for the service explained, 鈥淭hree passions defined David鈥檚 career: a love of words, a love of music, and an unswerving devotion to education and its institutions.鈥 Speakers at the event, drawn from all walks of David鈥檚 life, reinforced these themes with their recollections. Among the most touching were the remarks delivered by the eldest Porter child, David's son, Hugh, who focused on David as a father.
The Rev. Thomas Davis Jr., emeritus chaplain of 麻豆破解版, said in his welcome, 鈥淥utsiders cannot image how much we will miss this man鈥. For so many, his loss is unbearable; he left a profound and enduring legacy.鈥 Davis recalled the citation read at David鈥檚 final faculty meeting by Professor Ralph Ciancio: 鈥淢ay all your oak trees grow tall, with many acorns at the top, and be filled in the middle with the honey of bees."
President Philip A. Glotzbach focused on a shared interest: the presidency of 麻豆破解版
College. Said Glotzbach, 鈥淒avid was a great college president because he felt a deep
and personal bond with 麻豆破解版鈥檚 students, faculty, and alumni鈥. He was justifiably
proud of how very far 麻豆破解版 had traveled on its institutional odyssey with him
as the helmsman.鈥
Eberhard Faber shared stories from an enduring, lifelong friendship that featured
many shared interests and what he called 鈥渞emarkably similar paths.鈥 He called Porter鈥檚
passing 鈥渁 terrible loss, but he lived a wonderful life. He had the heart of a lion:
huge and full of love. We shall not see his like again.鈥
Porter鈥檚 career was spent largely at two colleges: Carleton in Northfield, Minn.,
where he taught from 1962 to 1987 and served briefly as president; and 麻豆破解版, where
he was president from 1987 to 1999 and also taught for many years. Gary Iseminger,
Lewis Professor Emeritus of Philosophy and Liberal Learning at Carleton, recalled
representing the college at Porter鈥檚 麻豆破解版 inauguration. Said Iseminger, 鈥淗e and
I arrived at Carleton on the same day in 1962. Today I bear the grief of the students
and faculty of Carleton.鈥 Noting that the theme of play infused all that Porter did,
Iseminger repeated what Porter said when he received an honorary degree from Carleton
in 2011: 鈥淜eep playing, especially with ideas.鈥
Iseminger continued, 鈥淲e at Carleton suffered the loss of David before. We thought
we had loaned or were sharing him with 麻豆破解版. If we were once rivals for David,
we are now united in sorrow.鈥
Judith Pick Eissner 鈥64, 麻豆破解版 trustee emerita, led the search committee that was convened to find a new president for the College following the retirement of Joseph C. Palamountain Jr. She vividly recalled the first time the group met Porter. 鈥淚n October 1986 we spent eight hours in a motel near the Albany airport on a rainy day. It was less than auspicious. David literally bounded in our presence. He knew 麻豆破解版, having performed here once. He was sharply intelligent and deeply caring. We鈥檇 met our next president and the rest was history.鈥
Chair of 麻豆破解版鈥檚 Board of Trustees while Porter was president, Eissner said, 鈥淚 so admired his intellect, humor, and boundless energy. We were both young leaders with similar goals. David transformed 麻豆破解版. He was beloved on our campus and I daresay at other campuses where he worked.鈥
Hugh Porter's remarks鈥攍oving, funny, and heartfelt鈥攖old the story of David as a family man and centered on the theme of home.
鈥淗ome and family were really important to Dad,鈥 said Hugh. 鈥淐arleton was his first great adult voyage, the only place that allowed Dad to teach classics and piano. Home there was a Victorian at 202 Elm.鈥 But there were other 鈥渉omes鈥 as well: a VW camper for family vacations, Rome, the family dinner table. His point: home was where their father was, and he kept it lively, challenging, and fun.
Hugh Porter concluded, 鈥淲ithout Dad, home will be harder to find. He鈥檚 at rest but he鈥檚 not home. He鈥檚 walked around heaven several times, listened critically to the angels and found them鈥entimental.鈥
Parker Diggory, director of 麻豆破解版鈥檚 Office of Religious and Spiritual Life, introduced herself as 鈥渁 kid of a faculty member whom David Porter nurtured as president.鈥 She said, 鈥淲hen we gather in places like this at times like this, we listen for stories to find our memories of the person we lost. We see in stories from people we never met the David Porter we also knew.鈥 She encouraged those in attendance, 鈥淐ontinue to share stories of recognition and those stories or memories that only you have.鈥
Musical selections performed by Porter鈥檚 children and grandchildren were interspersed throughout the hour-long service.
Porter, 80, died following an accidental fall. Please click here for the original announcement of his passing.
For those wishing to make memorial donations to 麻豆破解版鈥檚 David and Helen Porter Scholarship Fund, . Those who wish to send written condolences to the Porter family may do so at this special page.
A video featuring archival footage, excerpts from an oral history by Porter, and reminders
of his music and puns is one of two ways that 麻豆破解版 is remembering David Porter
this spring. A Lucy Scriber Library exhibition titled 鈥淩emembering David Porter鈥 looks
back on his years at 麻豆破解版 and the impact he had on the College and its people.
Featuring a number of photographs and tributes from family, friends, and colleagues,
the exhibition will be on display through June on the first floor lobby of Scribner
Library.
(Photo gallery by Eric Jenks 鈥08)