Salute to Excellence; Texas Tech graduate inducted into National 4-H Hall of Fame
Alvin Davis, a Texas Tech University alumnus and prominent leader in the cowboy culture and ranching heritage movement, has been named to the National 4-H Hall of Fame, officials announced today. The Post native was among 16 honorees from around the country selected to receive the annual honor.
Hall of Fame Award recipients are recognized for their lifetime achievements and contributions to 4-H, officials noted. As a sophomore at Texas Tech, Davis received the Moses Trophy, a historical national 4-H leadership award. At the time it was the highest honor that a 4-H club member could receive.
Davis' induction ceremony will be held Oct. 8 at the National 4-H Youth Conference Center in Chevy Chase, Md. He will be the first former 4-H member from Texas to be inducted, though five former 4-H extension agents have been inducted from the Lone Star state in the past.
The 4-H Hall of Fame was established about a decade ago as a part of the 100th anniversary celebration of 4-H work in the United States. The National Association of Extension 4-H Agents sponsored the celebration and it partners with the National 4-H Council and National Institute of Food and Agriculture in the operation of the National 4-H Hall of Fame project.
Davis received a bachelor's degree in animal husbandry from Texas Tech in 1952. While at the university he was president of the Tech 4-H Club and Tech Rodeo Association. He was director of the rodeo association's first National Intercollegiate Rodeo Association approved rodeo in 1950.
Meanwhile, Davis was a member of several other Tech organizations, including the Agriculture Club, Saddle Tramps, International Livestock Judging Team, and the Block and Bridle Club. He was later named one of Texas Tech's outstanding animal husbandry alumni and was the first inductee to the Texas Tech Rodeo Hall of Fame. He was named one of Tech's College of Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources Distinguished Alumni in 2001.
Following graduation Davis worked as executive vice president and a director at two national banks in the region, and later operated a mail order western awards business and owned several western retail stores. Eventually he returned to Lubbock to serve as executive vice president and general manager of the National Ranching Heritage Center. During that time he founded National Cowboy Symposium & Celebration.
Written by Norman Martin
CONTACT: John Burns, Dean, College of Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources, Texas Tech University at (806) 742-2808 or john.burns@ttu.edu
0823NM10 / Photo Illustration: N Martin
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