Clemson Honors Joseph P. Riley Jr.
Feb 15, 2018 09:28AM ● By Kathleen MarisPhoto: (L-R) John Wareham, assistant director of Rutland Institute for Ethics; Robert Rutland, founding benefactor; The Honorable Joseph P. Riley, Jr.; Scott Dishman, 2015 recipient of the Ethics in Action Award; and Robert H. Jones, Clemson University provost.
Clemson University’s Rutland Institute of Ethics honored former Charleston Mayor Joseph P. Riley Jr. with the 2018 Ethics in Action Award Feb. 10.
Speakers included Kelly Durham, Rutland Institute of Ethics advisory board chair; John Griffin, Clemson University’s associate provost and dean of Undergraduate Studies; Brian Hicks, co-author of The Mayor: Joe Riley and the Rise of Charleston and Post and Courier metro columnist; Capers Barr, Riley’s close friend; and Robert Jones, Clemson’s executive vice president for Academic Affairs and provost.
“I most humbly and gratefully accept the award, and Robert Rutland, I thank you for creating it,” Riley said. “In leadership, it’s got to be bumpy and it’s got to be controversial because you are working to lead. The status quo isn’t controversial. New and creative — sometimes aggressive — is controversial as it is change. You just don’t quit, you never relent. I feel that is the ultimate responsibility when you are in public life and in a leadership position, that your work and actions are to make it as good as it possibly can be."
Riley and John Wareham, assistant director of
the Rutland Institute for Ethics, have been discussing ways that Clemson
University could help sustain Riley's legacy of civic leadership and to assist
in its expansion throughout the state.
The James F. Barker Ethics in Action Award is
named for Clemson University’s 14th president and is bestowed upon
an individual whose actions exemplify integrity. Riley is
considered one of the most visionary and highly-effective governmental leaders
in America. He served 10 consecutive terms as mayor of Charleston from 1975 to
2016 and led a city government with an impressive
record of innovation in public safety, housing, arts and culture, children’s
issues, and economic revitalization and development.
“By the force of his character and his intellect, Joe Riley formed and forged the city of Charleston into a work of civic art, a grand mosaic of tangible and intangible parts,” said Barr. “Joe is known for the manner and force of his character and personality, his never-endingly warm and positive attitude, his calm and confident leadership in times of crisis, his inclusive style of governance, his dedication to the people he served his commitment to racial equality — Joe Riley set the moral tone of the community.”
“I followed the mayor around regularly and got to see first-hand how many lives he has touched — whether we were at a restaurant here in town or at an airport out of state, there was always somebody coming up to him — some memory, some story, some way he had touched their lives,” said Hicks. “His legacy is what he did for the people of Charleston. He managed to do the right thing every day. He opened this city up and made it inclusive.”