It’s been long in coming and much needed, Meals on Wheels North Central Texas Executive Director Christine Hockin-Boyd said. Finally, after much planning and Thursday’s groundbreaking ceremony, a new home for MOWNCT’s administrative facility is about 13 months away.
Renowned artist Tabor retires from GHS
As one of the most respected western expressionistic artists in the country, Mike Tabor has certainly done a lot of drawing. Now he is drawing the curtain on his day job as an art teacher for the Granbury school district.
Tabor has officially retired.
TRWD bringing an art gallery to the Trinity Trails in Fort Worth
The Tarrant Regional Water District (TRWD) is creating an art gallery about the Trinity River to celebrate its beauty and significance to the community.
But instead of simply hanging landscapes inside a building, it is literally displaying the art along the river’s banks for everyone to enjoy, at any time.
Museum
Granbury High School art teacher Mike Tabor is featured in the Fall 2020 newsletter of the Fort Worth Stock Show & Rodeo.
Sculptor who Brought General Rudder Back to Tarleton
A Year To Remember
Stephenville Empire-Tribune
Posted Dec 22, 2017
John Tarleton’s dream to create a higher education institution for students of modest means is reality. Tarleton State University offers an affordable, quality education and boasts graduates whose accomplishments would make its founder proud.
This monthly column, by an anonymous university author, looks at the school’s progress, achievements and challenges through the eyes of John Tarleton – a dreamer’s point of view.
2017 has been a year of historic firsts and groundbreaking successes. A year to remember–our Centennial in The Texas A&M University System.
We opened the doors to a new Agricultural Field Machinery and Fabrication Laboratory in January, broke ground for a state-of-the-art engineering building in spring, started renovation of Memorial Stadium this summer, and finalized plans for the first building on our Fort Worth campus this fall.
We also opened a portrait gallery of Tarleton’s past presidents and unveiled a life-size bronze of Maj. Gen. James Earl Rudder—American hero and Distinguished Alumnus, who later became Texas A&M University president and system chancellor.
The yearlong slate of activities celebrating our 100th anniversary as founding System member honored the people and programs responsible for creating one of the fastest growing universities in Texas.
Our $3.8 agricultural laboratory—part of the Agricultural Center on land purchased in 1917 by area residents to pave the way for Tarleton to join A&M —includes laboratories, classrooms, a computer lab, faculty offices and meeting spaces. With new funding approved by the legislature, Tarleton now plans to add a $10 million building at the Agricultural Center to replace those destroyed by tornado. The new facilities directly tie to our time-honored success in teaching agriculture.
Work on our $54.6 million engineering building, scheduled for completion next fall, will help us meet the need for highly skilled engineering professionals. The 97,800-square-foot building will provide space for programs now housed in several facilities and enable innovative teaching capabilities for engineering, computer science and engineering technology.
The $26.4 million renovation and expansion of Memorial Stadium will bring reoriented home stands, 2,000 added seats and improved amenities. Important to the university and the Stephenville community, the stadium honors the 179 Tarleton faculty, staff and students who died in World War II.
We witnessed a watershed moment in October when the Regents approved final construction plans for the first phase of Tarleton’s Fort Worth campus. Groundbreaking is set for February, with classes expected to begin in fall 2019. The future campus will stimulate job growth and improved quality of life in the region.
Thanks to Stephenville artist Mary Waters, pen-and-ink portraits of all 14 past Tarleton presidents are on permanent display on the second floor of the Administration Building. Each of them played a vital role in shaping Tarleton into the top-notch university it is today.
2017 wrapped up when James Earl Rudder returned to his beloved Tarleton this fall. A fitting end to a successful year. The life-size statue, created by Tarleton Distinguished Alumnus Mike Tabor and funded by System Regent Tony Buzbee, is the focal point of Rudder Way—formerly Vanderbilt Street on the university campus—and forever reminds us that those who enter our gates as students leave as leaders prepared to change our world for the better.
The Rudder event was part of the university’s overall utilities and infrastructure project that has reinvented Lillian and Vanderbilt streets on campus, while removing unsightly electric poles and solving drainage issues. While improving basic functions, the project enhances campus beauty.
Looking back over 2017, I can’t wait to see what’s around the bend.
A new year to remember awaits us.
Tarleton Bronze Unveiling
Tarleton Unveils Rudder Statue
Stephenville Empire-Tribune
Posted Oct 19, 2017
Family, friends, community members, students, faculty and staff gathered for a beautiful ceremony at Tarleton State University to honor Major General James Earl Rudder with a bronze statue unveiling and walkway, street dedication.
Rudder was a student at Tarleton from 1927-1930 followed by teaching and coaching football in 1938 before entering active military duty in 1941. He led a group of Army Rangers advancing onto the beaches of Normandy on D-Day returning to Texas as a war hero.
Rudder was appointed the Commissioner of the State General Land Office by Governor Allan Shivers before coming back to Tarleton.
“Rudder became the university’s vice president in 1958, ascending to the presidency a year later and chancellor of the Texas A&M University System, including Tarleton, in 1965,” states Rudder’s bio. “During his tenure, Texas A&M became co-ed and integrated. He set the direction for it to become a major research university.”
Speaking at the ceremony were Tarleton President Dr. F. Dominic Dottavio; Dr. Kyle McGregor, vice president for institutional advencement; Texas A&M University System Chancellor John Sharp; Board of Regents Chairman Charles W. Schwartz; Col. Felix Perez of the 75th Ranger Regiment; and statue donor Regent Anthony G. Buzbee.
Artist Mike Tabor was recognized for creating the Rudder bronze statue.
“Today we have an opportunity to recognize a Tarleton man, and Aggie leader and an American war hero,” Dottavio said at the ceremony. “General Rudder has been memorialized across this country and in fact, across the world with monuments and statues and buildings and even ships are named after him. As a Tarleton man, Earl Rudder was a student leader, football coach and our athletic director.”
Dottavio said in the next few weeks plaques will be inserted into the walkway where Rudder’s statue stands highlighting Tarleton’s Core Values.
“Each of those panels is going to have a quote from General Rudder that describes the Rudder way of doing things so that both his life and words inspire every student, faculty, staff and visitor that walks this way,” Dottavio said.
Tarleton University: Bronze of Major General James Earl Rudder
James Earl Rudder returns to his beloved Tarleton on Thursday, Oct. 19, when the university unveils a life-size bronze of the Army major general and American hero who later became president of Texas A&M University and chancellor of The Texas A&M University System.
Tarleton to Unveil Life-Size Bronze of Major General Earl Rudder
Stephenville Empire-Tribune
Posted Oct 10, 2017
Rudder started college at Tarleton in 1927 and graduated from Texas A&M. He returned in 1938 as a teacher and head football coach, serving as the university’s athletic director for one season before being called into active military duty in 1941.
The public unveiling of Rudder’s statue—part of Tarleton’s centennial celebration as founding member of the A&M System—begins at 4 p.m., following the fall meeting of the Board of Regents on the Stephenville campus. The event takes place between Wisdom Gym and the Nursing Building, near the intersection of North Rome Avenue and West Vanderbilt Street, at the end of a new pedestrian walkway.
In concert with the ceremony, Vanderbilt Street on the university campus officially becomes Rudder Way.
Rudder rose to fame during World War II as commander of the historic assault up the cliffs of Pointe du Hoc—part of the Normandy Invasion—and is remembered as Texas A&M’s innovative president who transformed a regional all-male military school into the renowned university of today. He oversaw the admission of women and African Americans to A&M, and championed its research function. Rudder died in 1970 as chancellor of the A&M System, having spent his final day on the Tarleton campus.
“Maj. Gen. Rudder loved Tarleton,” said President F. Dominic Dottavio. “It is where he discovered who he was, and what he wanted to be. A monument to honor this distinguished alumnus, heroic soldier and visionary leader is truly fitting as we celebrate our centennial. He will long be remembered for the Rudder Way of doing things and as a true example of Tarleton’s core values.”
In addition to A&M System Chancellor John Sharp and Regents, more than a dozen members of the Rudder family plan to attend the unveiling of the statue, created by Tarleton Distinguished Alumnus Mike Tabor and funded by Regent Anthony “Tony” Buzbee.
As a member of the A&M Board of Regents, Buzbee had passed Rudder’s statue on the campus of Texas A&M in College Station hundreds of times and thought it made perfect sense for Tarleton to have one, too. Like Rudder, Buzbee is a Texas Aggie. He earned his bachelor’s degree in psychology from Texas A&M and a law degree summa cum laude from the University of Houston Law School.
Tabor graduated from Tarleton in 1978 with a bachelor’s degree in art. One of America’s most respected Western Expressionist painters and an accomplished sculptor, his multiple-media portfolio includes the national renowned life-size bronze of Team Hoyt, the father-son duo best known for their 32-year participation in the Boston Marathon.
Tabor started work on the Rudder bronze at year’s end 2015, taking eight months to create a statue that portrays the military hero as a true American soldier and leader.
“My goal was to honor a fellow Tarleton alumnus with something meaningful for others to look at,” he said, “and to inspire them to live the Rudder Way.”
Mike Tabor Receives Howard Clemmons Distinguished Service Award
Granbury High School art teacher Mike Tabor was the recipient of a top award at the Granbury Chamber of Commerce’s Annual Best of Business Awards Banquet on February 5, 2016, at the Granbury Resort Conference Center.
Tabor was awarded the Howard Clemmons Distinguished Service Award along with Steve and Darlene Mitcham, local business owners and community volunteers. The honors were presented during a 1970’s-themed banquet featuring several awards for local businesses and chamber volunteers.
The Clemmons award goes to persons that most closely represent a former chamber chairman’s unselfish dedication to the chamber and the people of Granbury and Hood County.
Tabor, one of the most respected western expressionistic artists in America, credits pop artists of the 1960s and the impressionist movement for his approach to breaking traditional representations of western themes.
A career that began with drawings of beef cattle for publications has expanded to paintings, sculptures and assemblages, with collectors and corporate affiliations from coast to coast and across Europe.
For the past 23 years, Tabor has shared his passion for art by teaching high school students, many of whom have participated in the Fort Worth Stock Show Art Contest, winning their division 18 of the last 21 years. His leadership continues in other areas, with service on boards such as Texas Farm Bureau, the Glen Rose Rodeo Association and Somervell County Planning Committee. Tabor maintains the family ranch in Hood and Somervell counties.
Tabor’s career highlights include a life-size bronze of Dick and Rick Hoyt commissioned by John Hancock. Over the past three decades, the image of the father pushing his quadriplegic son has become synonymous with Patriots’ Day and their running the Boston Marathon. The sculpture sits on the lawn of Hopkinton (Mass.) School, just yards from the starting line of the annual race.
Tarleton Honors Distinguished Alumni
Tarleton Honors Distinguished Alumni During University Gala
Tarleton State University Alumni Association
Posted Feb 23, 2015
The Tarleton Alumni Association and Tarleton State University honored several distinguished alumni, former faculty and staff members, and a friend of the institution Saturday evening during The Gala of Tarleton State University, an annual dinner and awards banquet on campus.
Tarleton President F. Dominic Dottavio and Tarleton Alumni Association (TAA) President Mike Kornegay (‘66) welcomed nearly 300 former students, friends of the university and their families to The Gala where three Distinguished Alumni were presented bronze medallions and crystal awards.
This year’s TAA Distinguished Alumni were Leta Andrews (’74), Marilynn Frances Timberlake Johanson (’80) and Mike Tabor (’81). Honored as Outstanding Young Alumnus for 2015 was Britney Webb (’95, ’97). The TAA also named Mike Tate its 2015 Distinguished Staff and Drs. Pat and Don Zelman as Distinguished Faculty. Dr. George Hendrick, who established the Willene Lowery Hendrick Nursing Scholarship at Tarleton in 2011, was named the 2015 Distinguished Friend of the University. Accepting the award on Dr. Hendrick’s behalf was his brother and Tarleton alumnus, John Hendrick (’55).
Mike Tabor – Distinguished Alumni
Tabor, one of the most respected western expressionistic artists in America, credits pop artists of the 1960s and the impressionist movement for his approach to breaking traditional representations of western themes.
A career that began with drawings of beef cattle for publications has expanded to paintings, sculptures and assemblages, with collectors and corporate affiliations from coast to coast and across Europe.
For the past 22 years Tabor has shared his passion for art by teaching high school students, many of whom have participated in the Fort Worth Stock Show Art Contest, winning their division 17 of the last 20 years. His leadership continues in other areas, with service on boards such as Texas Farm Bureau, the Glen Rose Rodeo Association and Somervell County Planning Committee. Tabor maintains the family ranch in Hood and Somervell counties.
Tabor’s career highlights include a life-size bronze of Dick and Rick Hoyt commissioned by John Hancock. Over the past three decades, the image of the father pushing his quadriplegic son has become synonymous with Patriots’ Day and their running the Boston Marathon. The sculpture sits on the lawn of Hopkinton (Mass.) School, just yards from the starting line of the annual race.
Life-Size Team Hoyt Statue Unveiled
A large crowd gathered outside Center School Monday morning, just before the unveiling of the newest addition to Hopkinton – a life-size, bronze statue of Boston Marathon legends Rick and Dick Hoyt.
In a spirit of celebration, hundreds of people filled Ash Street between the common and the elementary school, that stretch of road having been closed for the event. Big band music blared over speakers, and 400 young Center School students lined the sidewalk and lawn. A high school senior sang the National Anthem, and state and U.S. dignitaries spoke to an eager audience.
“The marathon means so much to so many people, but there are two exceptional athletes who have captured the hearts of people around the world,” John Hancock spokeman Jim Gallagher said. John Hancock, the chief sponsor of the Boston Marathon, commissioned the statue and donated it to Hopkinton.
“Dick and Rick Hoyt are, quite simply, an inspiration,” Gallagher added. “We couldn’t think of a better place for this statue than Hopkinton.”
This is the 31st year the Hoyts will participate in the Boston Marathon, which begins Monday, April 15, a stone’s throw from the new statue. Dick Hoyt pushes his son – who has cerebral palsy and is wheelchair-bound – through many athletic events per year, but the Hoyts’ story is more than racing. Early in his son’s life, Dick Hoyt realized his son’s physical paralysis did not affect his mind, and despite a lack of encouragement from doctors and others, worked to find ways to let Rick speak, obtain college degrees, and even author books.
“It’s a very special event for the town,” Hopkinton resident Michelle Hallenbeck said. “Just to honor (the Hoyts). I think it’s phenomenal.”
“It’s just a really humbling experience to be with two great Hopkinton legends,” said high school senior Joshua Perez, after he spoke at the unveiling.
The Hoyts have often voiced feeling a connection to Hopkinton, and have given many presentations to Hopkinton students, including one last week at the middle school.
“Today is a special because Hopkinton is a permanent reminder of everything Dad and I stand for,” Rick Hoyt told a hushed audience, through a computerized voice at Monday’s unveiling. Referring to the slogan printed on the plaque at the foot of the new statue, he continued, “Hopefully, we have demonstrated to the world, that, no matter what, ‘Yes, you can.'”
John Hancock officials will not disclose the price of the statue, sculpted by Texan artist Mike Tabor.
“People will ask me, ‘what was your inspiration?’ Well, the Hoyts,” chuckled Tabor Monday. “If you can’t be inspired by them, well …”
The statue wasn’t supposed to be placed until next year, Tabor added, but he pushed forward his own deadline to get the art ready sooner.