Longwood Commencement 2019

Standing in the spot that had once been his childhood backyard, Skip Griffin issued a challenge to the Longwood University graduates sitting before him.

“As you go forward in life, I challenge you to be a lifelong learner,” he said. “The world requires you to never stop learning, never stop trying to understand your neighbors, never stop trying to understand the changes that are occurring, never stop trying to understand all of the peoples and the nations that make up this beautiful world.”

On the day after the 65th anniversary of the landmark Brown v. Board of Education case that struck down segregated public schools—in which Prince Edward County provided the majority of plaintiffs—President W. Taylor Reveley IV noted the remarkable journey that led Griffin to the stage.

“Skip spent his youth in the fulcrum of history, and he is central to a story that it is good for the soul to know,” said Reveley.

Education is not just about securing a means or a way to earn a living. It is also about learning to be a citizen and developing yourself more fully as a person.

Skip Griffin, civil rights pioneer, education advocate Tweet This
Skip Griffin with members of the Longwood University Board of Visitors
Skip Griffin with members of the Longwood University Board of Visitors

Griffin said his experiences give him a heightened understanding of the value of education.

“Education is not just about securing a means or a way to earn a living. It is also about learning to be a citizen and developing yourself more fully as a person,” Griffin said. “I’ve been impressed with your efforts and the requirement that you spend some time learning and understanding what it means to become a citizen participant in this great democracy of ours.”

Griffin’s charge to focus on building community by lifting others up was echoed by Brian Ball, the featured speaker at Friday evening’s graduate ceremony. Ball is the Virginia secretary of commerce and trade and recently helped lead Virginia’s successful bid to land a major Amazon headquarters.

Over commencement weekend, Longwood awarded 1,181 degrees: 145 in Friday’s graduate ceremony and 1,026 in Saturday’s undergraduate ceremony.

Show the world what Longwood is about. Illustrate what we’ve built here together. A place where the importance of citizen leadership is understood. A place where we come to see that it has no curricular boundaries. A place where our eyes are opened to the great good it can do.

Marianne Radcliff ’92, board of visitors rector Tweet This

Happy student during commencement

Board of Visitors Rector Marianne Radcliff ’92 urged graduates to take up the mantle of service that previous generations have carried.

“For people to understand Longwood, they need only to know her graduates,” she said. “Show the world what Longwood is about. Illustrate what we’ve built here together. A place where the importance of citizen leadership is understood. A place where we come to see that it has no curricular boundaries. A place where our eyes are opened to the great good it can do.”

Griffin and his family are luminous figures in Farmville. Skip and his sisters were plaintiffs in the landmark 1964 desegregation case that forced Prince Edward County to reopen public schools that had been shuttered rather than integrate. Their father, Rev. L. Francis Griffin, known as “The Fighting Preacher,” was a prominent voice in the civil rights movement and a staunch advocate for education rights.

Longwood works intentionally to build community—community means helping one another, and it means the actions that we take as individuals affect the whole.

Brian Ball, Virginia secretary of commerce and trade Tweet This

Two students hugging and laughing during Commencement

Skip Griffin dedicated Saturday’s commencement address to the memory of his parents, Rev. Griffin and Adelaide Payne Griffin, whom he said “dedicated all of their adult lives in your tradition of citizen leadership to trying to make this community a better place.”

The poignancy of the moment was not lost on Skip Griffin, himself a Harvard graduate who worked for the Boston Globe newspaper before joining Dialogos, a management consulting and leadership development firm. When he walked down Wheeler Mall on Friday to scope out the stage, he realized he was standing in the backyard of what was once his childhood home.

“In 1958, when we had to move from this home, the thought of me being here as speaker and the thought of students of color being in the graduating class was not a possibility,” he said. “That is not lost on me, and it is not lost on the members of this community. Sixty years ago, we in this community struggled against each other. For the last 10 years or so, we have struggled together to find a way forward to reconcile with one another and to move this community, this commonwealth and this nation toward a more perfect union. I challenge you to continue what your university has done here.”

At Saturday’s ceremony, three seniors shared the Sally Barksdale Hargrett (1921) Prize for Academic Excellence, given each year to the graduating senior or seniors with the highest grade-point average. Zachary Crawford Morgan, a chemistry major who plans to pursue a career in medicine, and twins Kate McKinzie and Kellen Elizabeth Spradlin, both business administration majors who will attend St. Joseph’s University to pursue master’s degrees, all achieved the highest possible GPA: a perfect 4.0.

A student committed to community service in myriad ways, Megan N. Garrett, who earned degrees in political science and economics, was awarded the prestigious Dan Daniel Senior Award for Scholarship and Citizenship. Garrett, who is going into the Peace Corps, has taken on numerous leadership roles on campus, including chair of the SGA student services committee, vice president of service for Mortar Board, and helping found Elwood’s Cabinet, a campus food pantry. She has also taught general education courses to local GED students and is currently collaborating with Farmville leadership to establish a permanent economic development position.

Retiring political science professor Dr. Bill Harbour was awarded the Student-Faculty Recognition Award, annually given to one faculty member for professional excellence and service to students.

Three graduating seniors were commissioned into the U.S. Army at the ceremony. Second Lt. Connor Perry, who graduated with a B.S. in biology with a minor in chemistry, will attend the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, where he will pursue a Ph.D. in emerging infectious diseases. Second Lt. Nicholas Hylton, who graduated with a B.S. in criminal justice, will attend the Aviation Basic Officer Leadership Course. Second Lt. Andy Wang, who graduated with a B.S. in business administration with a concentration in marketing, will also attend the Aviation Basic Officer Leadership Course before joining the 5-159th General Support Aviation Battalion.

At Friday evening’s graduate ceremony, Ball recounted the story of Colonel Rogers, a teacher and guidance counselor at his high school who had a profound impact on his life and worked behind the scenes to help him get into college and then law school.

“I wouldn’t be here talking to you if it weren’t for Colonel Rogers,” said Ball. “He saw a young man who was acting out, and he took the time and made the effort to help me. He didn’t have to do that, but he did, and he made a huge difference in my life. Each and every one of you can do that. I know it sounds trite, but that is so very true. And that’s true whether you’re in education or in business or in some other pursuit.”

Speaking to the 149 graduates at the ceremony, Ball urged them to lift up those around them so they can reflect on a life well-lived.

“Everything we do touches someone else because we don’t live as hermits. We’re social creatures and we can affect each other’s lives in wonderfully positive ways. Longwood works intentionally to build community—community means helping one another, and it means the actions that we take as individuals affect the whole. You may not get an angry kid like me into college, but you can make a difference, and you never know when you’re going to be someone else’s Colonel Rogers.”

At the ceremony, several faculty members and students were recognized with awards:

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