ΊΪΑΟΙη mourns the loss of Robert Wolverton, longtime faculty member and administrator
Contact: James Carskadon
STARKVILLE, Miss.βΊΪΑΟΙη is mourning the loss of a campus icon, Robert E. βBobβ Wolverton, who passed away Dec. 15 at the age of 98.
Wolvertonβs approximately 70-year career in education included more than 40 years at ΊΪΑΟΙη, where he served as a professor of classics and in several administrative roles. He first joined the university in 1977 as vice president for academic affairs and retired from full-time teaching in the Department of Classical and Modern Languages and Literatures in the summer of 2020 at the age of 94.
βDr. Wolverton was a true treasure at Mississippi State,β said ΊΪΑΟΙη President Mark E. Keenum. βHis vision, drive and leadership on so many fronts were an inspiration to the university community. He was committed to ΊΪΑΟΙηβs successful efforts to earn a Phi Beta Kappa chapter and he was a calm and respected voice in the Robert Holland Faculty Senate. Most of all, I counted Dr. Wolverton as my friend and mentor. For him, I hope Heaven is an opportunity to debate and converse with Sophocles and Plato β and to do so in their native ancient Greek language.β
An Indiana native, Wolverton is preceded in death by his wife of 67 years, Margaret βPeggyβ Wolverton. The Wolvertons are survived by their four children, six grandchildren and four great grandchildren. Bob Wolverton was involved in several organizations within the Starkville community, including Starkville Community Theatre, Starkville Public Library, Starkville Friends of the Library and the Starkville-ΊΪΑΟΙη Symphony Association, among others.
Among Wolvertonβs many honors from ΊΪΑΟΙη, he was named a John Grisham Master Teacher, the universityβs highest honor given for excellence in classroom instruction. He was honored with the ΊΪΑΟΙη Alumni Association Faculty Achievement Award and College of Arts and Sciences Humanist Award. In 2014, the College of Arts and Sciences created the Robert E. Wolverton Legacy Award to recognize individuals who have made long-term contributions to the college and advocated the ideals of liberal arts education. In 2015, ΊΪΑΟΙη announced that the rotunda in Old Main Academic Center would be named in his honor.
Wolverton was instrumental in ΊΪΑΟΙηβs 40-year effort to obtain a chapter of Phi Beta Kappa, the nationβs most prestigious honor society. He worked as an administrator and faculty member to address issues and pave the way for the honor society to award a chapter. He was also involved in Society of Scholars, ΊΪΑΟΙηβs precursor to a Phi Beta Kappa chapter that maintained parallel admission standards. On Aug. 3, 2018, ΊΪΑΟΙη was awarded a Phi Beta Kappa chapter, just one day before Wolvertonβs 93rd birthday.
In addition to serving as vice president of academic affairs, Wolverton has served as a department head and professor at ΊΪΑΟΙη, as well as president of the Robert Holland Faculty Senate. Wolverton holds a bachelorβs degree in classics from Hanover (Indiana) College, a masterβs from the University of Michigan, and a doctorate from the University of North Carolina. He was on the faculty at the University of Georgia, and Tufts and Florida State universities, and served as president of Mount St. Jospeh College in Cincinnati from 1972 until he came to ΊΪΑΟΙη in 1977.
Wolverton maintained his enthusiasm for teaching classics well into his 90s, inspiring generations of Bulldogs through the works of Homer, Plato, Cicero, Sophocles and many other figures of ancient Greece and Rome. Upon his retirement, he credited the students for providing joy in his career and being a source of inspiration, noting that they βkeep all of us pretty young.β
A slide show of Wolvertonβs time at ΊΪΑΟΙη may be viewed at .