R. Dean Wright
August 15, 2008
R. Dean Wright, Ellis and Nelle Levitt Professor Emeritus of Sociology at Drake University, died Friday, August 15 after a lengthy battle against cancer. He was 69.
Dean was born on September 12, 1938 near Stroud, Oklahoma. A few days later he was adopted by Leland and Ella Murray Wright and grew up in Thayer and Neodesha in Southern Kansas. Following Leland’s death, Ella married Everett Parsons in 1955. Everett adopted Dean some years later.
Dean completed Baccalaureate and Master’s degrees at Pittsburg State University in Kansas and his PhD in Sociology at the University of Missouri. During 1963-64 Dean was a Fulbright Scholar at Delhi University in New Delhi India and he served in the US Army from 1964-1966.
In September 1967 Dean married Susan Walker. They lived for three years in Blacksburg, Virginia where Dean taught at Virginia Tech. In 1971 they moved to Des Moines where their son, Ehren Dean was born in 1972.
Dean joined the faculty at Drake University in the fall of 1971 where he taught until his retirement in May 2004. Dean was a dynamic and caring teacher and was recognized for his commitment with awards and by the accomplishments of the many students with whom he stayed in touch. In 2002 he was named Ellis and Nelle Levitt Distinguished Professor of Sociology.
Dean was an active scholar publishing more than 50 articles in professional journals and several books. His most recent books, "Applying Sociology: Making the World a Better Place" in 2001 and "Politics in the Human Interest: Applying Sociology in the Real World" in 2007, articulate his intense interest in using academic research and expertise to help solve real-world problems.
These academic commitments were applied in his own life through many volunteer activities. His outreach in central Iowa included working at homeless shelters and with the Salvation Army service programs. He served as a member on many community boards and committees, and served as chair of the Greater Des Moines Salvation Army Board, the Iowa Criminal and Juvenile Justice Advisory Council, the Iowa State Council on Homelessness, and Compassion in Action and the Foundation Board for the Des Moines Area Religious Council.
His volunteer activities were recognized through many awards including The Madelyn M. Levitt Distinguished Community Service Award at Drake University, the Governor's Outstanding Volunteer Award, as well as awards from Amnesty International, Des Moines Area Religious Council, Iowa Corrections Association, Port of Entry, Iowa Community Action Association, and induction into the Iowa Volunteer Hall of Fame. Last April, the Iowa Legislature honored him for his lifetime of achievement. Dean also served his profession through active involvement in the Midwest Sociological Society including serving as president. He was recognized for his work by being named the first recipient of the Midwest Sociological Society Distinguished Service Award.
Dean loved to garden and to spend time with his family and friends. He was a devoted father and grandfather. Dean will be missed by his wife Sue, his son and daughter-in-law Ehren and Michelle Stover-Wright, his grandchildren Aiden and Ella, and his many friends and colleagues.
A memorial service will be held on August 29, 2008 at 1:00 p.m. in Sheslow Auditorium in Drake’s Old Main Hall. A reception will follow in Levitt Hall. In lieu of flowers, the family suggests donations to the Dean and Sue Wright Faculty Development Fund at Drake University or to the Des Moines Area Religious Council Foundation. Services are being handled by Hamilton’s on Westown Parkway.
Jim O'Brien
08/19/2008
Sue and family,
I will miss Deans warm smile. He was such a genuinely nice guy. I always felt he was truly happy to see me, just walking across campus he would always greet me with a smile. He touched many lives and left smiles on their hearts.
You are in my thoughts and prayers.
Jim
John Carter
08/19/2008
Sue, Ehren, Michelle and family:
I first met Dean when I was trying to decide where I wanted to go to school. I had gone out of state my freshman year, and really wanted to be back in Iowa to study criminology. Dean was THE reason that I chose Drake. I was so impressed with not only the breadth of his knowledge, but his genuine passion for teaching. He made every student feel as if they were the most important person in the world when he was talking to them.
Dean and I were from opposite ends of the political spectrum, but he loved reminding me that even I could learn something from a "fuzzy headed liberal" such as himself. Our classes were filled with lively debate, but Dean always let people know that he welcomed and respected everyone's opinions.
As I went through my career at Drake, I had the fortune of having both Dean and Sue for professors. Michelle was one of my classmates.
You have my deepest sympathies. We have all lost not only a wonderful educator, but a great friend.
John
Sociology Grad 1992
Renee Gentry
08/19/2008
I was deeply saddened to hear about Professor Wright. He was an integral part of two of the most profound experiences I had as a student at Drake. The first, a blisteringly frigid morning that Professor Wright took me and a few other classmates out to ride along with the Salvation Army. From the hill behind the Governor's mansion, to an abandoned building where a couple got ready for work and tried to keep their young children warm, and just after daybreak on what Professor Wright called "the most dangerous street in Des Moines", the bold graffiti on the side of house - striking evidence of a community standing up to the violence around them. Every place redifining the "homeless" for a group of young students. Every moment a reminder that to whom much is given much is expected.
The second experience came in the early minutes of a night class when we learned that Operation Desert Storm had begun and suddenly the world seemed a lot scarier. Professor Wright set aside our planned class work and just talked to us. It wasn't so much what he said, but the quiet, reassuring calm of his voice. Clarity in the chaos. He was not only our teacher, but our example. An examply for which I am grateful. And he will always be in my memories of Drake.
My sincerest sympathies to his family.
Renee J. Gentry '92
Jacqueline Sauer
08/19/2008
To all of us who knew Dean, either as a student, a friend, collegue or whatever your relationship may have been, I am sure that most of us feel the same amount of loss. I was a student of the professor's at Drake Unviersity and he served as my advisor for many years. I cherished the amount of time that I had in his classes, he made learning easy, sharing his through his expierences and teaching with a dose or reality. As someone who graduated Drake and became a teacher, I strived to teach like Dean. I taught sociology as a student teacher at Valley High School and used everything he taught me to try and relay his message to the next generation. It is a sad day to realize that we have lost one of our great minds and more importantly someone who made such a tremendous difference in the way that young minds viewed the world.
My deepest sympathy goes out to the Wright family.
Sincerely,
Jacqueline Sauer
Drake University Grad '01
David Sands, MD
08/18/2008
Dear Sue and Family,
I must start by appreciating all that you and Dean did for my mother, Golda, in the years she was without my father, Sidney. Your attention meant so much to her.
I am glad that I got to know and enjoy you both. Though I had some awareness of your important work, I was deeply impressed that you always seemed "just friends," not VIPs. Reviewing now Dean's lifelong work to better Des Moines, Iowa and the world, it is especially humbling to think that you were friends of my parents. So I thank you again for your generosity, companionship and gracious assistance.
Finally, I would like to add my personal appreciation of all that you did and of the example you set for your students, colleagues and the rest of us. You made community service seem so effortless and natural. Dean's life should be commemorated to future generations of students at Drake, in the public schools and throughout the community so that young people have the opportunity to receive inspiration from Dean's life just as they do from the lives of other great leaders. If Dean's passing was inevitable, then surely too is the emergence of new leaders, filled with his passion, from among those he taught. In this way, his work, his efforts to expand people's awareness to find new approaches to enduring problems, will continue for a long, long time.
I join you in celebrating the life of a very great man that I was blessed to know.
Sincerely,
David Sands, MD
Fairfield, Iowa
Michelle(wagner)Kinney
08/18/2008
Dr. Wright, Ehren and Michelle and family:
My thoughts and prayers are with all of you as you go through this tragic loss. I learned so much from all you during my time at Drake. Both Dr's wright helped shape me into the person that I am today and for that I thank you. You have a wonderful legacy that Dr. Wright has left behind. The memories that we all have are wonderful and for the opportunity to have known and learned from him and Sue I am grateful.
With deepest sympathy
Michelle
Sociology 1994 Drake Grad.
Joyce Martin
08/18/2008
I am a former student of Dr. Wright, a sociology major who graduated from Drake in 1992. I enjoyed taking classes from both Susan and Dean Wright and I wanted to express my deepest sympathy to Susan Wright and your family. I will never forget my trips with Dr. Wright to feed the homeless in Des Moines and how much he clearly cared about people. Much of my current political and intellectual framework was based on knowledge I gained from Dr. Wright's classes. My thoughts and prayers are with you and your family.
Justin Kendall
08/18/2008
Dean was such a wonderful person. He had a brilliant mind and a compassionate heart. I really admired him.
I met Dean while writing for Cityview and quickly developed a great friendship with him. We often met for lunch at Marino's so I could pick Dean's brain on homeless issues or just talk about life. I miss those conversations.
I lost contact with Dean after I moved to Kansas City. I wish I would have stayed in contact.
My condolences to Dean's family.
Bryan Loop
08/18/2008
Many things can be easily feigned in this life; passion is not one of them. As one of Professor Wright's students, I will always remember the purity and strength of his convictions; he taught his classes with a powerful positivity that shone through even when discussing some of life's cruelest circumstances. Professor Wright always left me with the feeling that no matter how unjust a situation in this world might be, it could always be improved by people who cared enough to do something. The loss of someone like Professor Wright certainly seems "unjust" ... but while he was with us, he cared, he did something, and he made the world a better place.
Rachel Boon
08/18/2008
We should all aspire to live a life as good and full as Dean's. I'm honored to know you all and wish you much peace at this difficult time. You are in our thoughts.
Tom and Marbeth Grouling
08/18/2008
Dear Sue,
Words are inadequate at times like this, but we wanted to express our condolences. Please know that you are in our thoughts and prayers.
Tom and Marbeth Grouling
Rod Henshaw
08/18/2008
I counted Dean as friend and a colleague. During a stretch when I had my own health challenges, Dean sought me out and supported me. That meant a lot to me and my recovery. He was also a great friend of Cowles Library, and freely gave his assistance to the library as a scholar and faculty member. We were pleased to have him present in the "Live at Cowles" leacture series. His advise, wisdom, wit, and friendship will be greatly missed.
Mike Crawford
08/18/2008
I am very sorry to hear of Dean's passing. He was one of the nicest, most humble and intelligent individuals I have ever met, and I am honored to have known him. My thoughts are with you all.
Allen Scult
08/18/2008
Dear Sue,
I'm so sorry for your loss.
There was always something reassuring about Dean's presence, even when just running into him at a party or an event. He had the knack of making intellgent, strong, statements about things without arrogance or pretense. He was also generous with adice and encouragement over the years, as you have been.
I doubt if you remember, but you first introduced me to Dean at the old faculty club to talk to me about spending the summer at University House at the University of Iowa. I followed his suggestions and wound up spending the first of many successful summers in Iowa City.
The Jewish response on such occassions is especially fitting for Dean, I think:
May his memory be for a blessing.
Warm regards,
Allen
David Wright
08/17/2008
I took it as the highest honor that many people confused me with Dean. He treated me as a brother, and many people asked if we were brothers. I felt in some ways we were. His love for Drake and Des Moines was incredibly powerful. I will miss his smile, his wisdom, and his love of life. May he rest in peace, and may we all carry forward his mission of love of our fellow man. All of them. I hope the family knows that we will never forget Dean or the impact he had on our lives. I will miss him terribly.