John C. Hitt(December 7, 1940 – February 20, 2023) was an American professor and academic administrator, who served as the fourthpresidentof theUniversity of Central FloridainOrlando,Florida from 1992 to 2018.[1]He was named theOrlando Sentinel'sCentral Floridian of the Year in 2005, and twice Orlando's most powerful person byOrlando Magazine.He was the dean of Florida's university presidents, as the longest tenured president in the state.[2][3] His reputation was materially tarnished by auditor findings that tens of millions of dollars were improperly spent on construction during his tenure as president.[4]He acknowledged the spending and resigned from his compensated fundraising role.[5]His successorDale Whittakerand the university's chief financial officer Bill Merck also resigned because of the scandal. Four other financial officers were fired.[6]
John C. Hitt | |
---|---|
4thPresident of the University of Central Florida | |
In office March 1, 1992 – June 30, 2018 | |
Preceded by | Robert A. Bryan(acting) |
Succeeded by | Dale Whittaker |
Personal details | |
Born | Houston,Texas, U.S. | December 7, 1940
Died | February 20, 2023 | (aged 82)
Spouse |
Martha Hitt (m.1961) |
Children | 2 |
Alma mater | Austin College(BA) Tulane University(MS,PhD) |
Profession |
|
Website | Office of the President |
Early life and career
editHitt grew up inHoustonand graduated fromAustin CollegeinSherman, Texasin 1962 with a bachelor of science degree in psychology. He continued his education atTulane University,where he completed both his master of science and his PhD by 1966. He stayed at Tulane and became an assistant professor. In 1969, Hitt moved toTexas Christian Universityworking as an associate professor of psychology. Three years later he became associate dean of the university, and in 1974 he became vice president of the school's research foundation. Soon afterwards he accepted the position of dean of the graduate school.
After serving as provost and vice president for academic affairs and professor of psychology atBradley Universityin Illinois for ten years, he moved to theUniversity of Mainein 1987 as vice president for academic affairs and professor of psychology. In 1991 he was named interim president of the school before accepting the presidency at the University of Central Florida.[1]
University of Central Florida presidency
editHitt was selected by theFlorida Board of Regentsto succeedRobert A. Bryanas UCF's president. Bryan had been serving in an interim capacity since June 1991 whenSteven Altmanstepped down as the university's third president.[7]
After Hitt took office in spring 1992, UCF's enrollment was 20,302 and by fall 2013 it was 59,770 with students from more than 140 countries.[8]Under Hitt's direction it raised admissions standards, increased research funding, built new facilities, and established notable partnerships with major research institutions.[9]
Hitt's efforts increased the university's academic profile and brought in over a billion dollars in new construction, includingSpectrum Stadium(now FBC Mortgage Stadium), theCFE Arena(now Addition Finance Arena), and new on-campus housing. Hitt was instrumental in the development of theUCF College of MedicineatLake Nona,and the formation of theBurnett Honors College,and theCollege of Graduate Studies.Under his leadership UCF became a "very high research activity" university as ranked bythe Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching,and the university's football program ascended to Division I-A (FBS) in 1996 and joined theAmerican Athletic Conference(The American).[10]
In October 2011, Hitt accepted a five-year contract extension.[11]In 2012, the main campus library was renamed for him to celebrate his 20th anniversary as president of the university.[12]In the same year he accepted a six percent raise and he offered faculty a half percent raise in 2013.[13]
On October 24, 2017, Hitt announced he would retire on June 30, 2018.[14]
Death
editHitt died on February 20, 2023, at the age of 82.[15]
References
edit- ^abMeet the PresidentUniversity of Central Florida Office of the President.
- ^"UCF's Hitt among nation's 10 highest-paid public-university presidents".Orlando Sentinel.April 3, 2011.
- ^Maxwell, Scott (December 29, 2008)."Who is the most powerful person in Central Florida?".Orlando Sentinel.Archived fromthe originalon December 29, 2008.
- ^Staff (February 22, 2019)."Colbourn Hall Controversy Investigation Records, Deposition Transcripts".KnightNews.com.RetrievedDecember 25,2020.
- ^Klawe-Genao, Joseph (December 23, 2018)."Hitt Goes Rogue: Past President Contradicts Current UCF Leadership, Ties It To Colbourn Hall Controversy".KnightNews.com.RetrievedDecember 25,2020.
- ^"UPDATE: UCF to Sever Ties with John Hitt over Misspent Funds".January 22, 2019.
- ^University of Central Florida Libraries, Special Collections,Robert A. Bryan Biographical Note.Retrieved February 17, 2012
- ^"Enrollment 2013-2014".University of Central Florida. Archived fromthe originalon August 3, 2014.RetrievedApril 10,2014.
- ^UCF chief gets top pay in FloridaSt. Petersburg Times.
- ^"Carnegie Classifications - Institution Profile: University of Central Florida".The Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching.RetrievedApril 17,2011.
- ^"President Hitt talks to UCF students in State of the University Address".Orlando Sentinel.RetrievedOctober 28,2011.
- ^"New Library Name a 'Hitt' with UCF Board of Trustees".University of Central Florida. March 15, 2012.RetrievedMay 14,2012.
- ^"UCF President John Hitt gets raise, bonus".Orlando Sentinel.RetrievedNovember 15,2012.
- ^"UCF President John Hitt will retire in 2018".Orlando Sentinel. October 24, 2017.RetrievedOctober 24,2017.
- ^Past UCF President John C. Hitt Dead at 82