Announcing the Alva L. and Sandra R. Addy Head of the Department of Mechanical Science and Engineering
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Announcing the
Alva L. and Sandra R.
Addy Head
of the Department of Mechanical Science and Engineering
Written by Kate Worster, The Grainger College of Engineering
The Department of Mechanical Science and Engineering is thrilled and humbled to announce the first named department headship in The Grainger College of Engineering – the Alva L. and Sandra R. Addy Head of the Department of Mechanical Science and Engineering.
A passion for higher education and a desire to continue their legacy led alumnus Alva“Tad” Addy (PhD ME 1963) and his wife Sandra Addy to establish this historic gift.
Tad, who passed away in 2018, was a pioneering fluid mechanics researcher and a beloved professor. He led the Department of Mechanical Science and Engineering (then Mechanical and Industrial Engineering) from 1987 to 1998 and had a profound impact on the quality of MechSE’s education, research and public service. Sandra (BS 1963, MS 1967, PhD 1974 Edu), worked for a time in alumni relations and fundraising for the department and was also a schoolteacher.
Tad was also an outstanding fundraiser. Fifteen of the department’s faculty members currently hold named appointments due in large part to his efforts.
“Tad loved the field of engineering. He understood the impact of education and the value of well-educated young engineers. He could talk about the difference a gift would make with great passion. He walked the talk and that gave him a lot of credibility,” said Sandra.
“With Sandra, Tad was an extremely effective advancement agent — they were a team,” said Tony Jacobi, department head of Mechanical Science and Engineering. “I loved Tad as a department head for many reasons, in particular his generosity and his support of young faculty, including me! He shaped a lot of careers, and it’s an honor to have the college’s first named headship come from a former department head.”
The named department headship is also a thank you to the two department heads preceding Tad, B.T. Chao and Helmut Korst. “They saw leadership abilities in Tad and gave him opportunities. He saw their ideas and built upon them,” said Sandra. “Both Tad and I are giving this gift, partly based on the inspirational leadership and mentorship from Dr. Chao and Dr. Korst. They were mentors and great friends, and they led Tad to be the department head he was.”
The Addys’ gift is an unrestricted bequest expectancy, meaning the funds have been left in a will and can be used for any purpose, in this case at the discretion of the department head. The Addys knew first-hand the value of unrestricted funds.
“When Tad became the department head, people came to him with a wide variety of needs and aspirations – students with ideas for team projects or wanting financial help to attend professional meetings, young professors wanting equipment for labs or help securing corporate support for their research. Tad helped them in every way that he could, but he had one especially flexible resource that he often turned to — the Alwin Schaller unrestricted endowment fund. That gift meant the world to Tad,” said Sandra, noting the named department headship is like the Schaller gift multiplied. Alwin Schaller (BSME 1907, MSME 1912) was an engineering pioneer and civic leader, as well as a generous donor across the Illinois campus.
Jacobi remembers how Tad created a professional atmosphere where people felt at ease, and discretionary funds supported that type of environment.
“Such discretionary funds can help glue the department together,” said Jacobi. “Through and post COVID, people have struggled with being socially connected. Roughly a quarter of our faculty joined us in the last two years, so we’ve seen a large change in the make-up of our department. The ability to support faculty and staff gatherings that help unify us, plus the flexibility to support high-risk ideas, enable young faculty and support student groups — the funds for those opportunities are incredibly important.”
“Tad and I worked hand in hand, but he was the driving force, and this gift reflects his intentions. It is a very rewarding thing for me to be able to do this,” said Sandra. “I was delighted to find out that this is the first named department headship in the college. I hope that department headship endowments will follow for other departments in The Grainger College of Engineering because I know first-hand what a powerful tool this endowment will be for the Department of Mechanical Science and Engineering.”
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This story was published September 11, 2024.