2020 U-M Kellogg Eye Center Annual Report

Page 30

Supporters’ Bequests Fuel Legacies of Research Progress and Educational Innovation

Jeanette R. Duckworth of Lansing began giving to the

Ferdinand A. “Dutch” Bower (1883-1971)

W.K. Kellogg Eye Center Annual Fund in 2002. Ferdinand A.

and Agnes M. Bower (1883-1975)

“Dutch” and Agnes M. Bower of Flint supported a fund in the

With more than a dozen automotive patents to his credit,

name of a longtime ophthalmology department chair. And James

Ferdinand A. “Dutch” Bower moved up the ranks at General

B. Thompson and Mary Ann Brandt of Okemos, Michigan,

Motors to become chief engineer at the Buick Motor Division.

made gifts to honor a faculty member who helped Ms. Brandt

In the 1920s and 30s, he was credited with improving ride

through her care for a rare systemic disease that impacted her

comfort and many other automotive advances, including an

vision — greatly improving her sight and her life.

innovative lubricating and filtering system, brake mechanism,

and oil pressure regulator.

Through estate gifts realized by Kellogg this year, these

individuals chose to continue their legacies of giving — and

Mr. Bower and his wife, Agnes M. Bower, were thoughtful

will have an enduring impact on the activities and care, research, and education. Jeanette R. Duckworth (1923-2018)

A University of Michigan School of Nursing graduate, Mrs. Duckworth pursued a career in nursing administration throughout the state. After retiring from Sparrow Hospital in Lansing, she

“lived a rich and rewarding life

and generous philanthropists. In the 1960s, they made arrangements to establish the F.A. & A. M. Bower Charitable Trust to ensure the causes they cared about would con-

IT IS INSPIRING TO SEE

PEOPLE MAKE AN INVESTMENT IN SOMETHING THEY CARE

deaths. They included the Father Flanagan’s Boys’ Home, the Flint Institute of Arts, the Flint Institute of Music, and the Roman

ABOUT — AND A PRIVILEGE TO DO

Catholic Diocese of Lansing.

THAT WORK IN THEIR MEMORY.

Kellogg Eye Center to the list,

— Paul P. Lee, M.D., J.D.

filled with cooking, needlework, Snoopy cartoons, family, and University of Michigan football,” according to her obituary, which ended with, “Go Blue!” Her husband, Ralph J. Duckworth, a quality control engineer in the automotive industry, passed away in 1998.

tinue to receive funding after their

success of our work to advance eye disease

Through her estate plan, Mrs. Duckworth added to her

long-term support of U-M, leaving two-thirds of the balance of

In 1969, they added the supporting the F. Bruce Fralick Ophthalmology Fund. F. Bruce Fralick, M.D., was the fifth chair of U-M’s Department of Ophthalmology

and Visual Sciences, serving in the role from

1938-1968. After Mrs. Bower died in 1975, the trust distributed gifts to the Fralick Fund annually until it was ended in January 2020, per the Bowers’ wishes. Kellogg received a percentage of the trust’s final assets at its dissolution.

her trust to the School of Nursing and one-third to the Kellogg

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Eye Center. The eye center has established an endowment to

James B. Thompson (1949 -2019)

honor her wish to provide financial assistance to those studying

Mary Ann Brandt (1949 -2017)

to advance vision care and research for future generations. The

When Mary Ann Brandt was first introduced to former Kellogg

Jeanette R. Duckworth Student Support Fund will forever assist

faculty member Stephen J. Saxe, M.D., her vision was becoming

individuals who are choosing to dedicate their lives to health

foggy and she had already lost her hearing. Her symptoms were

care and helping others.

caused by an uncommon systemic disorder known as Wegener’s


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