Gerald
Ford’s early training, which helped prepare him to become the 38th U.S.
president (1974-77), included two “tours of duty” in Chapel Hill, N.C.
He
arrived on campus for the first time in the summer of 1938 as a student to take
classes at the University of North Carolina School of Law.
Ford
grew up in Grand Rapids, Mich., and earned a bachelor’s degree from the
University of Michigan in Ann Arbor in 1935. He was an outstanding football
player there and after graduation, he accepted coaching jobs at Yale University
in New Haven, Conn., hoping to also go to law school there.
But,
dagnabbit! Those Yale administrators frowned on the idea of Ford being a
full-time employee as well as a law student. Eventually, they agreed to allow
Ford to enroll at Yale.
Harry
Shulman, a Yale law professor, handled things. Shulman was a visiting professor
at UNC in the summer of 1938, and it was agreed to allow Gerald Ford to start
law school at Chapel Hill, then “transfer” to Yale.
Roland
Giduz, editor of the Carolina Alumni Review, wrote about President
Ford’s “Carolina connection” in 1975. Technically, UNC cannot claim Gerald Ford
as “an academic alumnus,” but his “presence on campus” has historical
significance.
Ford
was described by UNC law school faculty members as “mature and serious of
purpose.” Giduz noted that President Ford mentioned two classmates by name – Harry
McMullan Jr. of Beaufort County and William F. Womble of Winston-Salem.
World
War II brought Gerald Ford back to Chapel Hill in a teaching capacity.
Ford
was a young lawyer in Grand Rapids when Japan attacked Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7,
1941. He promptly enlisted and was commissioned in the U.S. Naval Reserve on April
13, 1942. After attending flight instructor school at Annapolis, Md., Ford was
assigned as one of 83 instructors at Navy Pre-flight Training School in Chapel
Hill.
UNC
President Frank Porter Graham pledged that the university would offer “all its
resources to the nation for the defense of freedom and democracy.” Graham
campaigned hard to have the university’s newly built Horace Williams Airport designated
as one of the Navy’s four sites to offer the pre-flight training programs. It
was, and in all, about 18,700 Navy cadets trained on the UNC campus during the
war years.
The
young Navy flight instructors found housing within the community. Ford was matched
with recent UNC graduates Earl Baker Ruth and Bill McCachren. They moved into a
rented cabin near the airport.
Ruth
and McCachren had played basketball together at Charlotte Central High School
and were recruited to attend UNC. They were standouts on the Tar Heel
basketball teams of the late 1930s, coached by Walter Skidmore.
Ford
attained the rank of lieutenant in March 1942 and was sent to sea two months
later aboard a newly commissioned light aircraft carrier, the Monterey.
The ship was assigned to duty in the South Pacific. In 1944, she suffered
damage when a fire broke out, requiring the vessel to return to the United
States mainland for repairs. Ford was released from active duty on Feb. 23,
1946.
As
an attorney in Grand Rapids, Gerald Ford was elected to the first of his 13
terms in the U.S. House of Representatives in 1948.
Meanwhile,
after Ruth was discharged from the Navy in 1945, he settled in Salisbury and
joined the faculty at Catawba College. He went on to earn his master’s and
doctorate degrees at UNC. Ruth won a seat in the U.S. House in 1968. Ford, as
the House Minority Leader, was quick to welcome his old Navy chum and fellow Republican
to Congress.
Ruth
was elected for two succeeding terms. A “series of political events” led to the
swearing in of Gerald Ford, as the U.S. vice president, under Richard Nixon, on
Dec. 6, 1973.
One
of the first congratulatory wires to Ford was sent by George Barclay, a former
All-American football player at UNC. As an offensive guard, Barclay, lined up
next to Ford, the center, when the two participated in 1935 East-West All-Star
Shrine Bowl football classic.
They
became friends there in the trenches on the gridiron. Barclay’s advice to Ford
was: “Just keep centering the ball straight back!”
In 1975, President Gerald Ford appointed another old
friend, Earl Ruth, as governor of American Samoa. Tough duty, but someone had
to go to the paradise capital of Pago Pago in the South Pacific tropics. The Samoan
people said: “Talofa, governor,” meaning “welcome…with love.”
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