Henry, who was a health policy administration major at University Park and who later earned his Master of Business Administration from Temple University, built a 30-year career at Independence Blue Cross.
Henry was introduced to the Great Valley campus during a project management training conducted by his company in 2008. Afterwards, he joined the Great Valley Advisory Board and became a member of the committee supporting the “For the Future” campaign. He chaired the Great Valley Advisory Board from 2012-16 before transitioning to his role as chair of the Great Valley Campaign Committee during the “Greater Penn State” campaign.
Henry was the visionary behind and years-long advocate for transforming the existing library into the Penn State Great Valley Knowledge Commons, which reached fruition with a ribbon-cutting ceremony in November 2018. The renovated learning space created a shared and flexible facility to foster collaboration among students, faculty and staff.
Henry played a leading role in encouraging partnerships between donors and the University to support the graduate student population at Penn State Great Valley through the Open Doors Scholarship Matching Program during the University’s “A Greater Penn State” campaign. He has also co-chaired, together with Dallas Krapf, the Penn State Great Valley Golf Outing, for a decade. The golf outings raised significant funds supporting student scholarships and, most recently, the Great Valley LaunchBox.
Henry’s dedication and commitment to Great Valley is reflected in his own philanthropic support. He and his wife Marilyn have established the Henry Art Gallery on campus and the Joseph and Marilyn Henry Graduate Student Scholarship, and they have supported a variety of other campus initiatives. In October 2019, Joe and Marilyn were recognized as Platinum members at the inaugural celebration of the Penn State Great Valley Giving Society, honoring those who have supported the campus financially at a leadership level.
“Joe has proven himself to be a dynamic and inspiring leader throughout our development efforts over the last decade,” said Colin Neill, interim chancellor, dean and chief academic officer of Penn State Great Valley. “Especially through times when we were under-resourced and short-staffed, Joe stepped into the breach to shepherd potential donors, host key events and brainstorm meaningful projects. The entire University community owes him a debt of gratitude.”
Henry traces his dedication to volunteerism to the financial pressure he felt almost half a century ago. When he was enrolled at University Park in 1975, his father was out of work and the whole family was getting by on his mother’s salary as nurse.
“I’ll never forget it,” Henry recalled. “My mom handed me a $100-check and told me to ask the registrar if I could pay my bill piecemeal, because we just did not have money for the full tuition and room and board. That was a non-starter, of course, but they sent me across the street to the Office of Student Aid, and I wound up with an emergency student loan that covered my tuition and textbooks. Without that lifeline, I would’ve headed home, and maybe never finished my degree. So I know firsthand what it means to feel that in the pit of your stomach and to teeter on the edge of financial insecurity.”
With the record-breaking success of “A Greater Penn State for 21st Century Excellence,” which raised $2.2 billion from 2016 to 2022, philanthropy is helping to sustain the University’s tradition of education, research and service to communities across the commonwealth and around the globe. Scholarships enable our institution to open doors and welcome students from every background, support for transformative experiences allows our students and faculty to fulfill their vast potential for leadership, and gifts toward discovery and excellence help us to serve and impact the world we share. To learn more about the impact of giving and the continuing need for support, please visit raise.psu.edu.