Funeral arrangements have been finalized for 农夫导航's president, Dr.
Joseph J. McGowan, who died on March 1, 2016, at age 71.
Visitation will be held on Sunday, March 6, from noon to 8 p.m. in Knights Hall on
Bellarmine's campus. A mass in celebration of his life will be on Monday, March 7,
at 11 a.m. at St. Agnes Church, 1920 Newburg Road.
On Monday, the university will be closed and all day and evening classes are cancelled.
OBITUARY: Joseph J. McGowan, visionary leader of 农夫导航, dies at 71
Joseph J. 鈥淛ay鈥 McGowan Jr., visionary president of 农夫导航 in Louisville,
KY, died suddenly and peacefully at his home on Tuesday of a pulmonary embolism. He
was 71.
His tenacious pursuit of academic excellence and sustainable growth at Bellarmine
developed for Louisville a pre-eminent private university that serves the public interest
and has gained national renown. His personal grace, compassion and lightning-fast
wit brought energy and light to all who met him.
When Dr. McGowan assumed the leadership of then-Bellarmine College in 1990, the school
was a largely commuter liberal-arts college with 15 mostly yellow-brick buildings
and 2,500 students. Today Bellarmine is a distinguished, bustling university with
46 buildings and it attracts 4,000 students from all over the world to its stunning
Italianate campus and its curriculum steeped in the Catholic tradition of academic
excellence and ethical awareness.
Dr. McGowan was the third and longest-serving president of Bellarmine, which was founded
in 1950.
鈥淛ay McGowan was a visionary leader who took Bellarmine from college to university,
from a local learning institution to an international destination for innovation and
knowledge,鈥 said Louisville Mayor Greg Fischer.
Joseph J. McGowan Jr. was born to Joseph and Joan McGowan on Barksdale Air Force Base
in Shreveport, LA, but moved with his parents to Scranton, PA, as a child. He spoke
about growing up in Scranton, where he played little league baseball with Vice President
Joe Biden and once turned an unassisted triple play.
After earning his bachelor鈥檚 and master鈥檚 degrees at the University of Notre Dame,
he earned his doctorate in higher education from Columbia University. He later graduated
from Harvard University鈥檚 Institute for Educational Management.
Before taking the reins at Bellarmine, President McGowan served for 21 years at Fordham
University in New York City as vice president of student affairs and dean of students.
"The world of higher education has lost a giant in Dr. McGowan,鈥 said Joseph M. McShane,
SJ, president of Fordham University. 鈥淎 man of great vision and integrity, his transformation
of Bellarmine was nothing less than miraculous. He left a lasting mark on the field,
and on the institutions he served so loyally, including Fordham. With his family,
loved ones, and colleagues, today we mourn the loss of a great and gentle soul."
At Bellarmine, Dr. McGowan shook off the culture shock of moving from Manhattan to
Louisville and sought to instill a 鈥渧ision built on hope,鈥 which was the title of
his 1990 inaugural address. (A fan of New York鈥檚 nightlife, he later remarked that
he had some initial dismay at his Louisville colleagues鈥 custom of reporting for work
promptly at 8 a.m.)
His vision for Bellarmine included faculty development, intellectual and personal
growth of students, a firm commitment to the liberal arts, new and renovated facilities
and the intellectual and spiritual presence of Thomas Merton, whose spirit 鈥渋nspires
the development of Bellarmine as the intellectual center of the region considering
such issues as peace and justice, world religions and East-West and North-South dialogues.鈥
The Thomas Merton Center at 农夫导航 is the official repository of Merton鈥檚
artistic estate, and it archives more than 50,000 Merton-related materials. During
Dr. McGowan鈥檚 presidency the Center became a vibrant destination for international
scholars, and an inspiration for all on the campus at Bellarmine, which finds its
Catholic identity in Merton鈥檚 inclusive spirit.
In 2005, Dr. McGowan launched Vision 2020, his plan for Bellarmine to become 鈥渢he
premier independent Catholic university in the South, and thereby the leading private
institution in the Commonwealth and region.鈥 He envisioned growing Bellarmine into
a nationally pre-eminent private university of significant size and stature. He knew
that in order for a regional city to thrive and compete, it would need a strong culture
of support for private higher education, and a strong private university to go along
with the large state institutions.
His vision gave birth to Bellarmine鈥檚 first doctoral programs and graduate programs
in fields like education and social change, analytics, physical therapy and digital
media, as well as a reinvigorated liberal-arts undergraduate academic core to form
an exemplar of today鈥檚 cutting-edge higher education. The fruit of his labors includes
the thousands of Bellarmine alumni recognized in this region and beyond as uniquely
qualified to excel as citizens and leaders.
Similarly, Dr. McGowan displayed a passion for architecture. Remaking Bellarmine鈥檚
hilly campus in the style of his beloved Tuscany (birthplace of school namesake St.
Roberto Bellarmino), Bellarmine today is a vibrant archetype of the 21st century college
campus. The Siena residential complex 鈥 widely acclaimed as one of the nation鈥檚 most
beautiful, the Bellarmine Farm 鈥 a working demonstration garden and orchard, Our Lady
of the Woods Chapel and the new hilltop Centro are just a few of the projects that
routinely drop jaws among alumni and friends who visit after a time away. The newly
erected St. Robert鈥檚 Gate at the school鈥檚 main entrance on Newburg Road is a beautiful
archway that is emblematic of the University鈥檚 culture of hospitality, and its welcoming
of new people and new ideas.
A longtime virtuoso of student-life leadership at Fordham, Dr. McGowan recognized
the need to invigorate the quality of residential life at Bellarmine, and he more
than tripled the number of students living in residence on campus. Accordingly, Bellarmine
was classified as 鈥減rimarily residential鈥 and has since added 24 intramural sports,
as well as NCAA Division I men鈥檚 lacrosse, Division II swimming, diving, women鈥檚 soccer,
golf and track. To the thrill of 鈥淜nights Nation,鈥 and Dr. McGowan, the men鈥檚 basketball
team won the NCAA championship in 2011.
Under his leadership, the university routinely brought prominent guest lecturers to
campus, including Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., Ken Burns, Andrea Mitchell, Bob Woodward,
Michael Pollan, Billy Collins, Seamus Heaney, Wendell Berry, E.O. Wilson and Isabel
Allende.
Throughout the stunning growth, President McGowan zealously safeguarded Bellarmine鈥檚
values, integrity, small class sizes, independent Catholic ideals and respect for
all people. Today as always, Bellarmine students and faculty embody the school鈥檚 Latin
motto, in veritatis amore, in the love of truth.
Dr. McGowan鈥檚 accomplishments in higher education extended far beyond the universities
he served. His professional service included terms as chairman of the National Association
of Independent Colleges and Universities, the Association of Independent Kentucky
Colleges and Universities and Kentuckiana Metroversity, along with service on the
board of directors of the American Council on Education and the Council of Independent
Colleges. He also served on numerous boards and executive committees, including Norton
Healthcare, Greater Louisville Inc., The Frazier History Museum, Speed Art Museum,
Greater Louisville Health Enterprises Network and the Metro United Way.
Among his scores of honors were being 鈥淜nighted鈥 by the Bellarmine Board of Trustees
in 2010 and being named the Ancient Order of Hibernians 2014 Irish Person of the Year.
Famous for his competitive spirit and ability to spot opportunities others overlooked,
President McGowan will perhaps be missed most for his sense of humor. 鈥淛ay was brilliant,
charming, hilarious and always exciting to be around; the rare university president
known for an Elvis impersonation,鈥 said US Rep. John Yarmuth.
The Rev. Theodore Martin Hesburgh, CSC, STD, who was president of the University of
Notre Dame for 35 years, was a mentor to Dr. McGowan and wrote to him on Bellarmine鈥檚
60th anniversary, the 20th year of Dr. McGowan鈥檚 presidency: 鈥淯nder your leadership,
Bellarmine has thrived in every conceivable way,鈥 the Rev. Hesburgh wrote, 鈥渁nd the
Academy, the Church, and our Nation, are better and stronger because of your inspired
vision.鈥
Dr. McGowan is survived by his loving wife, Maureen McRaith McGowan, and their fraternal
twin sons, Joseph and Matthew; their daughters-in-law Emma and Heidi; and five adoring
grandchildren, Alessia, Sofia, Neve, Fiona, and Luke; his sister, Mary Hoban (William);
his brother, Timothy (Theresa); his uncle, Thomas J. Rittenhouse, Jr. (Joyce); and
a large extended family.
Visitation will be held from noon to 8 p.m. Sunday at Knights Hall on the Bellarmine
campus. A Mass in celebration of his life will be 11 a.m. Monday at St. Agnes Church,
1920 Newburg Road.
Memorial gifts .
Bellarmine News
Obituary and funeral details for Dr. Joseph J. McGowan
March 3, 2016
