Seminole Spirit

Math alumnus, veteran, and football Hall of Famer John Crowe gives back to the university that left its imprint on his life

Mon, 07/08/24
John Crowe
John Crowe. Photo by Devin Bittner.

For many, college is a catalyst for new beginnings. For John Crowe, is more: it has served as the foundation for nearly every aspect of his life since he first stepped foot on campus almost 60 years ago.

"I owe FSU more than I can repay for what it鈥檚 given me,鈥 said Crowe, who earned a bachelor鈥檚 in 1969 and a master鈥檚 in 1971, both from the . 鈥淓verything I did here, from academics to the to football, was foundational to my life. Everything comes back to having a good education; it inspired me to never stop learning.鈥

While Crowe, who grew up about 30 miles from Orlando in a small town called St. Cloud, was recruited to several universities for various sports, he fell in love with Tallahassee during his first visit and came to FSU the summer of 1965 on a football scholarship.

鈥淭he game of football is like the game of life: playing taught me lessons that translated off the field like teamwork and dealing with penalties and setbacks,鈥 Crowe said. 鈥淪imultaneously, studying math taught me to be logical and to put in the extra effort even when it wasn鈥檛 required. I鈥檓 especially thankful for [Robert O. Lawton Professor of Mathematics] De Witt Sumners, my advisor, who supported and encouraged me through my endeavors.鈥

John and Betty Crowe, center, and family. Courtesy photo.

It wasn鈥檛 all hard work. At a sorority-fraternity Christmas party, Crowe met Betty, a home economics, education and extension major, who became the love of his life. After a drive-in first date and a second the next night at Mom & Dad鈥檚 Italian Restaurant, the rest was history; Betty and John have been married 54 years, and John describes her as the wind beneath the Crowes鈥 wings.

At the time 鈥 the U.S. military was fighting in Vietnam and the draft was in effect 鈥 ROTC was mandatory for every male student, but Crowe鈥檚 discovery of a love for flying led to him commissioning as an Air Force second lieutenant upon his bachelor鈥檚 graduation. Due to his excellence in both military training and mathematics, Crowe received an educational delay to complete his graduate program before starting his service as an Air Force pilot.

鈥淚 was lucky to fly around the world,鈥 Crowe said. 鈥淚 flew Vietnam prisoners of war back to America, flew presidential support with Air Force One several times, and I completed many other meaningful missions. After seven years, I was assigned to the Air Force Academy where I taught mathematics and was an assistant football and basketball coach 鈥 ROTC provided me with these once-in-a-lifetime experiences.鈥

From top left: John and Betty Crowe at their wedding. John and Betty Crowe around the world. Courtesy photos.

Upon his retirement as a USAF lieutenant colonel, Crowe continued a second career in paper manufacturing, working his way up to chairman and CEO for Buckeye Technologies, a former division of Procter & Gamble. In 2013, Buckeye Technologies merged with Georgia Pacific, and Crowe retired again to work in consulting and write. In 2019, he and teammate Dale McCullers co-authored 鈥淔SU鈥檚 Sons of the 60s,鈥 a tribute to the Seminole defensive players of the decade, and in 2020, Crowe published 鈥淟iving in the Cloud: Lessons from the Streets,鈥 which Betty describes as a love letter to his hometown.

Today, in addition to being active alumni and regular attendees at FSU sporting events, the Crowes are and members of the . John also serves on the College of Arts and Sciences Leadership Council. In 2019, five decades after his first graduation, John gave the FSU commencement address.

鈥淭he love our family has for FSU spans generations 鈥 brothers, nieces, sisters-in-law, and grandchildren are graduates or current students,鈥 Betty said. 鈥淚鈥檓 proud of the excellent education I received that has helped me in every step of my life, and it was a gift that we could both attend FSU. It means even more that we can give back to this great institution.鈥

The Crowes also established the De Witt Sumners Endowment within the Department of Mathematics to support a professorship; the Joyce Wolfgang Williams Endowment for Excellence within the in honor of Betty鈥檚 sister-in-law who taught at FSU in the 1970s; and the Johnnie Stephens Scholarship Fund in athletics to honor John鈥檚 teammate who was killed in combat in Vietnam in 1969.

鈥淛ohn and Betty are remarkably generous with their time and resources,鈥 said Dean Sam Huckaba. 鈥淎s a student-athlete who excelled on the field and in the classroom, not to mention a career filled with successes, John has a unique perspective. He set a superb example for the rest of us to follow, and the Crowes鈥 philanthropic actions will have lasting impacts on the college and the Department of Mathematics.鈥