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A Lettinga Legacy
On Sunday, Aug. 7, 2022, Davenport lost a friend and tremendous advocate with the passing of Wilbur Lettinga.
“It’s rare that one person can make a long and lasting impact in the lives of thousands of students, but Wilbur Lettinga was certainly one of those unique individuals,” said Dr. Richard J. Pappas, president of Davenport University. “His support of Davenport University and the students who walk through our doors and into incredible careers is a testament to his outstanding leadership and dedication as a community-minded philanthropist.”
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Lettinga served on the board of trustees for Davenport University for nearly 50 years. He was a generous donor, mentor, and leader for students and staff alike.
Wilbur’s legacy at Davenport
University started nearly 70 years ago when he decided to attend Davenport College in Grand Rapids.

As Wilbur Lettinga once said, the key to his future was quite literally the same one he used to ignite his Chevrolet Bellaire one summer morning in 1953. “I grew up on a farm, not knowing where to go after high school,” Lettinga explained. “So, I got in my car and drove to Davenport. It was the beginning of my career.”
The decision was not quite as spontaneous as it sounded, although it did represent a complete change of direction. ‘Bill’ (his lifelong nickname) already had been accepted into Milwaukee’s Berean Bible College to begin studying for the ministry, but by his own account he was “never comfortable with that decision.” Fred Kamminga, his boss at Kamminga Auto Wash in Grand Rapids where Bill worked part-time, suggested he consider Davenport Institute.
Talented in math, Lettinga enrolled as an accounting major, fi nancing his education by working as a bookkeeper at a nearby Texaco gas station. After graduating in 1955, he apprenticed at the accounting fi rm of Davenport instructor James Rugg and began studying for his CPA exams. Eager to go into business for himself, Lettinga opened his own offi ce.
Wilbur became a force in the West Michigan community as a leader and creator of multiple businesses. He possessed the entrepreneur’s instincts for recognizing opportunities early, including computerized journaling and lasers when they were both emerging technologies. (Laser Alignment, the fi rm Lettinga founded in 1968, patented a process that helped excavate the route of the Chunnel beneath the English Channel.) From underground sprinkling systems to fi nance, he pursued virtually every idea that interested him. His original accounting fi rm, which he later named Lettinga and Associates, and Kentland Corporation, which managed mobile home parks and offi ce buildings, operated successfully for decades.
The son of Dutch immigrant farmers always considered Davenport’s modest beginnings analogous to his own. Referring to Davenport Institute’s fi rst-fl oor retail space at 2 East Fulton, Lettinga recalls attending classes on the second fl oor “above the shoe store.”
But these memories are infused with his loyalty and unwavering support. Prospering with his successful fi rms, Lettinga has remained a lifelong major benefactor, helping Davenport grow from the single two-story building he attended to an elegant Heritage Hill campus, and eventually to the 43-acre Caledonia campus that features his name.
Pictured: Robert Sneden and Wilbur Lettinga
Joined the Davenport Board of Trustees (Chairman for 13 years)
1973

Davenport in 1955
1955
Graduated from Davenport DU Review
Lettinga began giving back to his alma mater by joining the Davenport College governing board as a trustee in 1973. In 1978, he began a 13-year tenure as chair under President Donald Maine and continued to serve on the board. He was also a founding board member of the Davenport College Foundation in 1982 and was honored with the Distinguished Alumni Award the following year.
In 1986, the W.A. Lettinga Entrepreneurial Center on the Fulton Street campus was dedicated to his stature in the business community. As a resource for small businesses and corporate clients alike, the facility represented Lettinga’s commitment to business development and excellence in West Michigan.
In 2001, Lettinga was recognized by Davenport University with a Peter C. Cook Award for exemplifying professional success and commitment to community service.
In 2005, a generous gift from Lettinga established a new campus in southeast Grand Rapids in his
Received the Distinguished Alumni Award
Created fi ve endowed scholarships in his family’s name
1983 1989-2000
1982
Helped establish and served on the Davenport University Foundation Board (40 years)

1986
name. The new campus propelled the university into a full-service academic institution off ering new residential opportunities and expanding its programming to include bachelor’s and graduate programs.
Over time Lettinga has impacted so many students through the establishment of the Wilbur and Sharon Lettinga Endowed
Scholarships. Most recently, together with his children,
Bill Lettinga, Jr. and the late
Michael P. Lettinga Trust (via
Connie Lettinga), he donated the Prairie Creek Investors building to the university. Other prominent organizations have benefi ted from his legacy. Lettinga initiated the Hope Network Foundation in 1987 and named the Coral Lettinga Campus for his granddaughter. He was a founding member of the Butterworth Foundation board and in 1996 donated the funds that made the Lettinga Cancer Center possible. He has also served on many other community boards, including Hospice of Michigan, and holds an honorary Doctor of Law degree from his alma mater.

Received the Peter C. Cook Excellence in Business Award
Gifted the Kraft Lake Business Building to Davenport University
2001 2021
1999
Principal donor in naming the Lettinga Campus
2017
Committed funds to help make the Maine College of Business Building and VanderLaan Arena possible DU Review