UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — It’s rare for one person to profoundly influence a generation of scientists. Robert “Bob” Eberly, for whom the Eberly College of Science is named, was one of those people. He could do so because of his hard work, wealth, love of science and learning, and the heartfelt feeling that Penn State was a place with a great potential to do good.
Last year — 2020 — marked the 30th anniversary of the conferring of the Eberly name on the College of Science by the Penn State Board of Trustees. To understand the magnitude of the Eberly family’s initial gift to Penn State in 1986, it’s helpful to reflect on the person, what made him tick, and why he was so generous.
Bob Eberly was the first in his family to attend college. His father, Orville, worked in the coal mines of western Pennsylvania and used this background to become a business magnate in the energy and, later, banking sectors. Orville instilled the value of education in his son Bob, who came to Penn State in the fall of 1936 and graduated with a chemistry degree in 1939. Bob’s passion for Penn State was profound. On his 80th birthday he remarked, “Penn State cost me relatively nothing compared to the money I have made. Am I grateful? Yes, forever. If I paid it back thousands of times, I would still be in debt.”
“But it wasn’t about him,” said Rod Kirsch, Penn State’s senior vice president for development and alumni relations at the time of the gift. “He had the wealth to make these kinds of gifts, but he was just genuinely generous and wanted to help make others successful.”