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June 6, 2023 How One Wall Built the Foundation for Faculty Success and Much More

With a great-grandfather who established Southern icon White Lily Flour in Knoxville in the late 19th century, Libba Wall (’59) and her family are deeply invested in the Knoxville community. Family connections partly led her to establish the James Johnson Dudley Architecture Faculty Scholar Award Endowment for the ֲý at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville.

Libba Wall
Wall

“I named the award after my son, who studied architecture at UT and now practices in Charlotte [North Carolina],” said Wall. “I also have a stepson who works in the college, so I wanted to support the place that’s supported my family.”

From refugee camps to your city park—the research enabled by the Dudley Faculty Award addresses the full gamut of human experience through the physical spaces we inhabit.

“I supported faculty research because it not only enables innovations that benefit our world, but it also gives opportunity to students to assist and learn from their professors’ research,” said Wall. “As an endowment, the award will go on doing that in perpetuity.”

in spring edition of gratitude. This article was originally published onand shared here with permission.

Libba Wall with all six Dudley Faculty Scholars and her son, James Dudley, during the fall research presentation. From left to right: Libba Wall, Avigail Sachs, Ted Shelton, Brian Ambroziak, Rana Abudayyeh, Jennifer Akerman, Liz Teston, and James Dudley.
Libba Wall with all six Dudley Faculty Scholars and her son, James Dudley, during the fall research presentation. From left to right: Libba Wall, Avigail Sachs, Ted Shelton, Brian Ambroziak, Rana Abudayyeh, Jennifer Akerman, Liz Teston, and James Dudley.