Document Type

Finding Aid

Publication Date

11-9-2018

Inclusive Dates--Span

1962-2015

Inclusive Dates--Bulk

1962-2015

Scope and Content Note

These papers document the life and work of Dwayne Dale VanRheenen through subject files, speeches, correspondence, and other written materials.

Biographical Note

The following biographical note is excerpted from ACU Today’s article “ACU Remembers: Dr. Dwayne VanRheenen” by Ron Hadfield:

Former Abilene Christian University provost Dr. Dwayne Dale VanRheenen, 72, died Aug. 11, 2016, in Washington state following an illness….

VanRheenen was born in the Dutch farming town of Prairie City, Iowa, on April 13, 1944. At a young age, Dwayne’s parents left the Dutch Orthodox Church for the Church of Christ and were shunned from their community. Without family or community support, the growing VanRheenen family moved frequently as Dwayne’s father preached across the Midwest and South, pausing to farm and raise pigs and other livestock when the seasons and financial needs intersected. Dwayne told stories of late nights as a schoolboy (after spending the day in the fields and school) bent over a typewriter pecking out his father’s sermons as he gave dictation. This ethic of work hard, pray hard, study hard was one that stuck with him all his life.

Although poorly educated themselves, his parents desired their children to become leaders in ministry and academia, and eventually settled in Paragould, Ark., so Dwayne and his siblings could attend Crowley’s Ridge Academy, a Church of Christ elementary and high school where he met Joan Allison. The two attended Harding University together, began dating and married shortly after graduation on Aug. 26, 1966. He spent summers selling Bibles door-to-door for the Southwestern Book Company and preaching in rural churches to pay his tuition. Following graduation, Dwayne attended graduate school at the University of Missouri, eventually earning a master’s degree and a Ph.D. in speech communication. He helped plant the Brewer Church of Christ, preached regularly across the region and began to rise in the ranks of academia.

He taught at the University of Maine from 1970-85, serving as associate professor and chair of speech communication. He also was coordinator of graduate studies while an adjunct professor of speech at Bangor Theological Seminary.

In 1985, he accepted a position at Pepperdine University and formally began his love affair with Christian higher education – a passion that would last for 25 years. He was dean of Pepperdine’s Seaver College of Letters, Arts and Sciences while directing the college’s graduate programs and serving as a professor of communication. He also was an elder in the Conejo Valley Church of Christ for nine years, recognized as a Christ-centered, people-first, compassionate leader and intellectual.

In 1996, he became provost of ACU, where he championed many transformative initiatives to increase the university’s academic reputation, including the Adams Center for Teaching and Learning, the Honors College, the Study Abroad program, the First-Year Program, the College of Education and Human Services, the School of Social Work, the School of Information Technology and Computing, the Graduate School of Theology, faculty renewal leaves, the advancement of women and minority faculty, funding for faculty development, increased rigor in tenure and promotion, and a new general education core.

In all things, he sought to make ACU more academically competitive and prestigious, racially and culturally inclusive, all while still holding strongly to its deep Church of Christ roots. He remained a modern-day reformer, both on campus and in his role as elder at the Highland Church of Christ, until his retirement in 2009.

In retirement, he and Joan lived in Washington to be closer to their children and grandchildren. He was preceded in death by his parents, Chalmer and Lorna Van Rheenen, and a granddaughter, Jenna Westerholm.

Among survivors are Joan, his wife of 49 years; two sons, Nathan VanRheenen and Derek VanRheenen (’00 M.S.); a daughter, Michele Westerholm; two brothers, Gailyn Van Rheenen (’75 M.S.) and Mark VanRheenen; two sisters, Karen Cuthbertson and Lorual Peschka; and six grandchildren.”

Donor Note

VanRheenen family

Arrangement

Materials were kept in the order they were received as much as possible. The folder titles listed below in the inventory are a direct transcription from the creator’s original description. In some cases abbreviations were replaced with fuller name forms. Untitled or blank folders are indicated in square brackets, as in [Untitled folder].

Content List

See PDF finding aid for folder inventory.

Language

ENGLISH

Extent of Collection

27 linear feet (18 boxes)

Manuscript Number

Center for Restoration Studies Manuscripts #36

Physical Location

Center for Restoration Studies

Use Restrictions

Open to researchers. Contact Abilene Christian University Special Collections and Archives to make an appointment.

Processing Status

Processed

Finding Aid created by

Brady Cox, Mac Ice, Amanda Dietz

Comments

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