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Contact: John Chandler
(818) 677-5674
john.chandler@csun.edu
Ralph Prator, Founding President of What is Now Cal State Northridge, Has Died
(NORTHRIDGE,
Calif., July 26, 2005)--Longtime college administrator Ralph
Prator--the founding president of the institution that became
California State University, Northridge, now one of California's
largest public universities--died Monday, July 25, in his Ventura
County retirement hometown of Camarillo. Prator was 97.
A lifelong athlete and avid golfer who briefly played baseball as a
young man with pitching great "Dizzy" Dean, Prator amassed a 30-year
career as a college and university administrator. That was capped by
Prator's 10 years as president of San Fernando Valley State College
from its founding in July 1958 until his retirement in September 1968.
In 1972, the college became a university and was renamed California
State University, Northridge.
During that first decade of explosive growth in the San Fernando
Valley, Prator oversaw the construction of the campus' original core of
permanent buildings (most of which remain today), quadrupled the
college's 3,500 original students to more than 16,000 by his
retirement, and spearheaded major land acquisitions that assembled most
of today's 356-acre university campus.
Prior to that, Prator had served eight years as president of
Bakersfield College in Kern County from 1950 to 1958, similarly helping
that college develop a new campus. Recalling his retirement from San
Fernando Valley State in later years, Prator once said, "I felt as an
administrator I was best able to start and push something to its
maximum possibilities. But to settle down and run it was not my cup of
tea."
After retiring, Prator became a professor emeritus in what became Cal
State Northridge's Department of Educational Leadership and Policy
Studies. For the past two decades, Prator lived in a Camarillo
retirement community, playing golf and working out three times a week
at Point Mugu Naval Air Station as a captain in the Naval Reserve.
He
also periodically kept in touch with Cal State Northridge's current
president, Jolene Koester. "Cal State Northridge would not be the
strong institution it is today without Ralph Prator's leadership and
vision. As the founding president, he gave us a solid foundation upon
which to build the university's excellence," Koester said.
"President
Prator maintained a keen interest in the university, and I received
notes from him periodically that were always encouraging and generous.
We are proud of his legacy at Cal State Northridge and will always
honor his memory," she added.
Born
of a ranching family in La Veta, Colorado on Nov. 16, 1907, Prator
attended the University of Colorado, earning a bachelor's degree in
history in 1929 and a master's in the same field in 1931. After serving
in the U.S. Navy from 1942 to 1945, Prator earned his doctorate in
educational administration from the University of California at
Berkeley in 1947.
Prator's career included early stints as a high school principal for
three years, an administrator at Mesa College in Colorado from 1936 to
1939, in a variety of administrative positions at the University of
Colorado from 1940 to 1942, and then again after World War II from 1945
until his move to California in 1950.
His tenure at San Fernando Valley State, which became the only
four-year public college and later university in its region, included
recruiting most of the faculty hired in the early years and setting the
academic direction for the institution. Today, Cal State Northridge is
one of California's largest public universities with nearly 33,000
students.
Prator is survived by his sister Elizabeth Bryan in Oklahoma; three
adult children: eldest Bruce in Oregon, Lewis in Fountain Valley and
Roxanna (Prator) Gottsacker, a CSUN education alumna, in New Hampshire,
and four adult grandchildren. Prator's wife of nearly 60 years, Lois,
who was a schoolteacher, died in 1996.
At Prator's request, no public funeral or ceremony is planned. In lieu
of flowers, the family is requesting donations to the Cal State
Northridge student scholarship fund established by Prator and his wife,
the CSUN University Women's Club Lois and Ralph Prator Scholarship
Fund. Checks can be made payable to the Cal State Northridge
Foundation, 18111 Nordhoff St., Northridge, CA 91330-8275.
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