Gary D. McCaleb
| Gary Day McCaleb | |
| In office 1990 – 1999 | |
| Preceded by | Dale Ferguson |
|---|---|
| Succeeded by | Grady Barr |
| Born | November 2, 1941 Anson, Jones County Texas, USA |
| Nationality | American |
| Political party | Republican |
| Spouse(s) | Sylvia Ravanelli McCaleb |
| Children | Cara Lee Cranford
Bryan Day McCaleb |
| Occupation | University vice president; management professor |
| Religion | Church of Christ |
Notes:
| |
- Not to be confused with another Gary McCaleb, the legal counsel for the conservative Alliance Defense Fund, a group involved in issues of religious freedom.[1]
Gary Day McCaleb (born November 2, 1941) is the retired vice president and professor of management at Abilene Christian University in Abilene, Texas, and a prominent civic leader who formerly served as the mayor of his city. With degrees in business administration and management, McCaleb is also the executive director of ACU's Center for Building Community, which seeks creative and practical solutions to crises that exist at all levels of society. Through the Center for Building Community, McCaleb recruited well-known speakers to Abilene, including film critic Michael Medved, former Oklahoma Republican U.S. Representative J. C. Watts, and the late former prime minister of Pakistan, Benazir Bhutto.[2] McCaleb instructs a course in leadership in the ACU College of Business.[3]
Background
McCaleb was born in Anson in Jones County north of Abilene, one of five children, to Victor Earl McCaleb (1917-2009, an insurance agent who served two terms as mayor of Anson, beginning in 1948, and the former Vivian Day (1917-2000).[4] McCaleb's brother, Bill Perry McCaleb (1953-2015) died in Washington State and is interred by his parents in Mount Hope Cemetery in Anson.[5] (Anson is named for Anson Jones, a founder of the Republic of Texas).
McCaleb graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1964 from ACU, a Church of Christ institution, as had his mother in 1938[6] and his father in 1939. McCaleb then received a Master of Business Administration degree (1975) and a Ph.D. in management (1979), both from Texas A&M University in College Station. McCaleb began his academic career as assistant director (1964-1965) and then director of alumni relations (1965-1969) at ACU. He was thereafter director of college relations, assistant academic dean, assistant professor of business administration, vice president and dean of campus life (1980-1983), and dean of campus life (1983-1991). He was named vice president in 1991 during his second year as the part-time mayor.
On June 5, 1964, McCaleb married the former Sylvia Ravanelli (born 1945); they have a daughter, Cara Lee Cranford, and a son, Bryan Day McCaleb, and six grandchildren. McCaleb is an avid jogger who has run marathons in New York City, Dallas, and Houston.[3][7] McCaleb is active in United Way in Abilene, the March of Dimes, the American Cancer Society, and the Abilene Task Force on Drug and Alcohol Abuse.[7]
Mayor McCaleb
McCaleb served three three-year terms as mayor from 1990 to 1999 but did not seek a fourth term.[8] McCaleb is a Republican, but all municipal offices in Texas are officially nonpartisan. Previously, McCaleb was a member of the Abilene City Council from 1985 to 1990.[7] On taking office, McCaleb said that Abilene should view itself as an international city, rather than a regional city between Fort Worth and Midland. Midway in his mayoral tenure, McCaleb established the Mayor's Task Force on Technology and invited sixty citizens from Abilene representing the education, health care, business, and government sectors, to serve on the panel. The task force created an awareness level in the community for people who otherwise knew little about recent advances in technology. McCaleb said the group also showed a spirit of cooperation as the members developed an information-sharing mode.[9]
McCaleb is a former president of the Texas Municipal League, and formerly served on the board of directors of the National League of Cities, with expertise in finance, administration, and intergovernmental relations.[7] He frequently lectures throughout the nation on such topics as local government and community building and in such international locations as Jerusalem, Prague, and Beijing. The trip to China in 1993 was a 17-day event, with other city officials included.[2] McCaleb also represented his city on a special trip to Corinth, Greece, the sister city of Abilene.[3] McCaleb conducted periodic workshops through the Texas Municipal League for new city officials.[10]
McCaleb is a recipient of the John Ben Shepperd Political Courage Award, named for the state attorney general of Texas during the 1950s and presented in Austin by the Shepperd Public Leadership Forum.[7]
Other accomplishments
McCaleb is the author of two books: Community: The Other Side of Self and The Gift of Community.[11] He is also an artist.
McCaleb formerly hosted McCaleb & Company, an oral history television program through ACU. On August 2, 2006, he received the Texas Oral History Association's Barnes Award for excellence in community oral history. Specifically, McCaleb created fifty-five videotaped oral history interviews for the Abilene Centennial Project in 1983. He interviewed individuals who describe their personal experiences in the growth and development of Abilene. The interviewees include other former mayors, sports figures, and Paul Siple, who first used the term, wind chill factor. The oral history tapes are housed in the Grace Museum history archive in downtown Abilene.[12]
McCaleb teamed with Kathy Morehead to establish an unusual art museum, the National Center for Children's Illustrated Literature. NCCIL, located at 102 Cedar Street in downtown Abilene, unveils three new exhibits each year. There is no admission fee.[13] The museum was featured in a 2007 segment of Bob Phillips' syndicated television anthology series, Texas Country Reporter. In the broadcast, McCaleb notes that numerous children's books refer to "Abilene, Texas," which he equates with the American "heartland". He recalled an illustrator from the East Coast who expressed surprise to find such a museum in Abilene.[14]
McCaleb retired from ACU in 2021.
References
- ↑ Alliance Defense Fund, Alliance Alert (September 25, 2008; specific article no longer on-line).
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Memorable Mayors of Abilene. Abilene Reporter-News (January 27, 2006). Retrieved on August 22, 2015; no longer on-line.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 McCaleb to receive oral history award. ACU News (August 1, 2006). Retrieved on August 22, 2015; no longer on-line.
- ↑ Earl McCaleb. Findagrave.com. Retrieved on October 15, 2019.
- ↑ Bill Perry McCaleb. Findagrave.com. Retrieved on October 15, 2019.
- ↑ Vivian Day McCaleb. Findagrave.com. Retrieved on October 15, 2019.
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 (1999) Who's Who in America. Marquis. ISBN 978-0-8379-0191-6.
- ↑ Gary McCaleb honored for 50 years of service to ACU, the Abilene community. KTXS.com (ABC in Abilene) (April 21, 2014). Retrieved on August 21, 2015; no longer on-line.
- ↑ Abilene Mayor Gary McCaleb, Government Technology website, October 1, 1996: [1]
- ↑ Gary McCaleb to headline event. Abilene Christian University (July 20, 2005). Retrieved on August 22, 2015; no longer on-line.
- ↑ Books by Dr. Gary McCaleb, Texas Municipal League Online:[2]
- ↑ Texas Oral History Association" Gary McCaleb. Baylor University in Waco (2006). Retrieved on October 14, 2019.
- ↑ Texas State Travel Guide, 2008, p. 107.
- ↑ "Kathy Morehead and Gary McCaleb," National Center for Children's Illustrated Literature, 102 Cedar Street, Abilene, TX 79601, Texas Country Reporter, June 21, 2008.