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Dolphus Whitten, Jr.

Class of
1975
Dolphus Whitten, Jr.

Dolphus Whitten, Jr.

“A college education should help a person earn a living, but it certainly should do more than that. It should make the living worthwhile.”
Dolphus Whitten, Jr., 1979

Biography

Arkansas native Dolphus Whitten, Jr., graduated from Ouachita College (now Ouachita Baptist University) in Arkansas in 1936 and from the University of Texas with an M.A. in 1940 and a Ph.D. in American history in 1961. Regarded as an authority on the drafting of the U.S. Constitution, he wrote a three-volume treatise on the federal convention of 1787. He entered the teaching profession at the age of 19 and served as high school teacher and principal, a college professor, and a university administrator. During World War II, Mr. Whitten was an administrative and educational officer in the Ninth Air Force in England and France. He joined Oklahoma City University in 1958 and became its president in 1970, giving leadership to a succession of innovations in higher education which attracted widespread attention. OCU’s “Great Plan of Academic Excellence,” launched in 1960 with the assistance of a consultative committee from MIT, has been called “a model for the country.” He was also active on all levels of the United Methodist Church and acted as an officer or board member with over 20 civic, professional, and cultural organizations.

Fun fact

Despite his busy schedule, Dolphus Whitten, Jr., found time to moderate “Candid Campus,” a television series on higher education in Oklahoma that aired in the 1970s on Oklahoma City, Tulsa, and Lawton stations.

Oklahoma connections

Whitten came to Oklahoma City University as administrative dean in 1958.

Hometown

Oklahoma City

Profession

Educator

Presenter

Born

1916

Died

1998
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