On a hot winter morning in South Texas a few weeks ago, in a chapel nestled into a corner of the legendary King Ranch, Dr. W. Joseph “Joey” King was inaugurated as the 12th president of Presbyterian Pan American School. During the ceremony, I was invited to share the story of my friendship with Fred Rogers, the late icon of children’s television.
It turns out that Fred’s life and legacy is wholly complementary to that of the Presbyterian Pan American School. Fred Rogers was the embodiment of the highest human virtues — love, compassion, wisdom and non-judgment. In its own way, the relatively obscure institution set on ranchland is the same.
Henrietta King, the wife of King Ranch founder and legend Richard King. Henrietta was a devout Presbyterian who took seriously the teachings of Jesus in the beatitudes and Christ’s admonition that “whatever you do for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you do for me.” At the time, Mexican and Mexican American children could not attend school in South Texas. So, Henrietta and other idealistic Presbyterians, most notably the first school president, the Rev. J.W. Skinner, created a school for them. At the time, Mexican people could not be treated in white hospitals. So, an infirmary was built for them on the Pan Am campus.The Presbyterian Pan American School eventually became a coed college preparatory boarding school, but not just for Mexican and Mexican American students. Young people from around the world now find their way to the classrooms and dormitories on the King Ranch, from Africa, China, Taiwan and other countries of South America. Most of them arrive speaking limited English, but by the end of four years, they are fluent in the language, with test scores and academic proficiency sufficient for acceptance at the finest colleges and universities in the United States. All of this has been achieved at a school that adheres closely to the founding values of Henrietta King and her Presbyterian brethren.
“Since its beginning, Pan Am has been a visionary project, and in its modern form, it continues to be,” Joey King said in his inaugural address. “Our commitment to an excellent college preparatory program, steeped in the liberal arts, with deep spiritual, service, and leadership components remains strong.”
“There is a broad spectrum of utopianism,” he said. “And as I thought about Pan Am, the idea that J.W. Skinner comes out here in 1912 and literally just starts hacking a school out of the wilderness for kids that just aren't allowed to go to school, that’s a very utopian vision.”
At a reception the night before Joey’s inauguration, I had a long conversation with Sam Trinidad, a successful businessman in a town near Mexico City, and a 1992 graduate of PPAS.
Sam and his wife, Jenny, have three children, and Sam wanted each of them to have the same opportunity. But the very idea of it terrified his oldest child, Enya, who could not imagine leaving her family, friends and school for an isolated ranch in South Texas. She was 14 years old when she arrived at PPAS, and there were many lonely and tearful calls home.
But there were also new friends from other regions of Mexico, Colombia, Venezuela, Korea and Rwanda.
“It just pops the bubble you're living in,” said Enya, who graduated from PPAS in 2021. She will graduate this spring from the University of the Ozarks in Arkansas. “You are just so used to being with the same people in the same environment, doing the same things, and then you meet people that think differently, have been through different things, have lived in different environments with different cultures. At Pan Am they had the international banquet once a year. It was great to see all the different types of music, the different languages. So yeah, you just think that maybe this world is not all about me. It humbles you. It’s very unique.”
Tim Madigan, Special to Presbyterian News Service (Click here to read original PNS story)
Let us join in prayer for:
- Clare Lewis, President & CEO, Presbyterian Investment & Loan Program
- Shelly Lewis, Administrative Manager, Controller’s Office, Administrative Services Group (A Corp)
Let us pray:
Dear God, your blessings are always evident and give us the good pleasure of enjoying your presence. Continue to abide with us as we love and serve those in need. In Christ’s service. Amen.