Academy of Distinguished Alumni
Fred D. Durham (posthumous), Academy of Distinguished Alumni Award 2000
B.S. 1922
Former President and Chairman
Dover Corporation

Fred Durham was born in Howertons, Virginia in 1899. He enrolled at Virginia Tech in the fall of 1917 and after three years of study elected to leave school for a year. He worked in the engine room of a tramp steamer which, among other cargoes, transported coal from Wales to North Africa. After his travels around the world, he returned to school a year later and completed his undergraduate degree in Civil Engineering in 1922. While a student, Lt. Durham was a member of the Corps of Cadets, serving as the Sergeant-of-Arms and the Corps' Vice-President. He was also a member of the Cotillion Club and the Rappahannock Valley Club.



After graduation, Mr. Durham went to work for Bell Telephone Company in Atlanta. While there, he was "loaned" to the C. Lee Cook Manufacturing Company in Louisville, Kentucky. Soon thereafter, he joined the company on a full-time basis. In 1927 the company's President died and, in 1928, Fred Durham borrowed money, bought control, and became President. The C. Lee Cook Manufacturing Company produced high-temperature, high-pressure sealing devices, including metal packings and industrial piston rings. Mr. Durham's year in the engine room of a tramp steamer had provided the "laboratory experience" to succeed in this new opportunity.



In 1955 Mr. Durham and George Ohstrom formed the Dover Corporation, and the C. Lee Cook Manufacturing Company was merged with three other firms to make up the new company. Mr. Durham became Chairman and President of Dover Corporation. He remained in that position until his retirement in 1971. At that time the executives of the company presented him with a tribute quoting Ralph Waldo Emerson's famous dictum, "An institution is the lengthened shadow of one man." The tribute added that "Dover corporation owes its success, character and in large measure its future to the management philosophy and practices of one man."



The Dover Corporation has continued the highly decentralized management strategy that Mr. Durham initiated and today consists of more than 50 separate businesses and is among the Fortune 500 companies. With headquarters in New York City, Dover trades stock on the New York Stock Exchange and was featured in the December 1, 1986, issue of Forbes. The company is a leading manufacturer of several products, including hydraulic and traction elevators; auto lifts; piston rings and metallic packing; valves and nozzles to handle gasoline and other hazardous liquids; ball-screw actuators; and master-slave manipulators.



An active Virginia Tech alumnus, Mr. Durham was a member of the College of Engineering Committee of 100. He was honored as the College's Distinguished Alumnus for 1987.



Fred was married to the former Victoria B. Durham. They had a daughter, Eleanor Durham Davenport, who resides in Richmond with her husband William. At the time of Mr. Durham's death on April 17, 1998, he also had three grandchildren, three great-grandchildren, and one great-great grandchild.