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Since assuming office as Vice Chancellor and President of the
University of the South in 2000, Joel Cunningham has led a
multi-faceted strategic planning effort that has touched virtually
every area of the University's operation, resulting in increased
applications for the undergraduate College of Arts and Sciences, a
revitalization of the School of Theology, and a growing recognition
of Sewanee as a national liberal arts university of the top rank.
Under his leadership, The Sewanee Call fundraising campaign came to
a record-breaking conclusion in 2008 with over $205.7 million in
gifts and commitments, exceeding the $180 million goal by over $25
million. The campaign was marked by over $40 million in endowment
commitments for scholarships and faculty support; academic,
residential and athletics facility construction; a 3,000-acre
addition to the University's landholdings; and significant academic
support.
Throughout his career, Cunningham has been active nationally in
higher education, and he has raised Sewanee's profile among the
nation's top liberal arts institutions. He was a founding
member of both the National Campus Compact and the Pennsylvania
Campus Compact organizations for student public service. He
chaired the Commission on Policy Analysis of the National
Association of Independent Colleges and Universities and was
president of the Society for Values in Higher Education. He
is active in the Association of Episcopal Colleges, the Colleges
and Universities of the Anglican Communion, the Tennessee
Independent Colleges and Universities Association, the Appalachian
Colleges Association and the Committee on Policy Analysis and
Public Relations of the National Association of Independent
Colleges and Universities.
Joel Cunningham became the 15th Vice Chancellor and President of
the University of the South in July, 2000. He grew up in Oak
Ridge, Tennessee, and came first to Sewanee at age 8 when his older
brother enrolled as a freshman. He graduated summa cum laude
from the University of Chattanooga in 1965 with majors in
mathematics and psychology, and he completed his master's and
doctoral degrees in mathematics from the University of Oregon.
He began his career in academe as a member of the faculty at the
University of Kentucky, where he taught mathematics for five
years. He made his first return to Tennessee, to his alma
mater, in fact, when he was appointed dean of continuing education
and mathematics faculty member at the University of Tennessee at
Chattanooga, in 1974. He served a year as an American Council
on Education Fellow with the Chancellor of the University of
Tennessee, Knoxville, and the President of the University of
Tennessee. He left Chattanooga in 1979 to become vice
president for academic affairs, dean of the faculty, and professor
of mathematics at Susquehanna University in Pennsylvania. In
1984 he was named president there where he remained until 2000,
when he was elected vice chancellor by Sewanee's board of trustees
and made his second Tennessee homecoming.
Joel and Trudy Cunningham were married a week after their
graduation from the University of Chattanooga. Trudy has had
her own distinguished career, including service as a mathematics
faculty member at the Baylor School and as a faculty member and
dean at Bucknell University. She now teaches and is an
academic administrator at Sewanee. The Cunninghams have two
daughters who live now in New York City and Washington, DC.
"We believe that broadly educated men and women are ideally suited
to address the complexities of life and work," says Cunningham.
"Sewanee graduates are better able to perceive connections among
disciplines, to think creatively, and to communicate with others.
These are the essential characteristics of citizenship and
leadership, and we do a better job than most in achieving them."




































