Rick Barger never had a masterplan to attend Penn State. Born in Butler, Pennsylvania, he enrolled for two years at Butler Community College and in the summer of 1968 took a job at Armco Steel Co., where he worked as a furnace tender heating ingots to be rolled into coiled steel.
“Our crew took a break, and the guy next to me told me he was going to enroll in what was called at that time Penn State’s Capitol Campus,” Barger said. “That idea appealed to me because it had the resources of a major university but still had the feel of a close-knit community. I never worked with that guy again, but that conversation changed the course of my life.”
Barger attended Penn State Harrisburg and earned his bachelor’s degree in business in 1971, encouraged by his girlfriend and then wife, Patty. The Bargers’ gratitude for the life and the family of seven children that they have built together has driven them to become leaders and supporters for the campus where Rick got his start.
“I was the first in my family to go to college,” said Barger. “Everybody I knew worked in a factory, but the professors gave me individualized advice. They saw my talent for accounting and guided me in the right direction.”
In 1971, Barger joined the accounting firm Ernst & Ernst, which later became Ernst and Young, where he was named partner in 1985. After finishing out his career at Ernst and Young, now known as EY, Barger became the executive vice president and CFO at Diakon Lutheran Social Ministries, of Allentown, Pennsylvania. Today, he continues to serve on one of its board of directors.
As he advanced in his career, Barger also completed the Executive Program at Northwestern University’s J.J. Kellogg School of Management and became a certified public accountant.
Barger always prioritized making time for volunteerism, with many roles and responsibilities at the campus where he got his start. He served as the chair for Penn State Harrisburg’s campaign committee throughout the most recently completed fundraising campaign, “A Greater Penn State for 21st Century Excellence.” Under his volunteer leadership, Barger met with major donors and prospects, led a planned giving outreach effort, and ultimately helped shepherd the record-setting completion of a $44.9 million campaign.
“Rick and Patty have been outstanding leaders in identifying the challenges facing students and devising solutions,” said John M. Mason Jr., former chancellor of Penn State Harrisburg. “Because of their efforts, we’ve built a more affordable and accessible University, and our entrepreneurial programs are better equipped to train students to adapt, innovate and excel.”
Patty is a now-retired registered nurse who enjoyed a long career at UPMC Harrisburg, including an extended stint in the Post Anesthesia Care Unit. While their children were in school, she served on the school board, and she devotes time to raising caterpillars and releasing Monarch butterflies.
In addition to their volunteerism, Rick and Patty are lifelong donors to the University. The Barger Fund for Penn State Harrisburg in Memory of Jonathan P. Barger honors their son Jon, who died tragically in a car accident in 1997. The endowment assists students with international travel opportunities. As the Bargers became increasingly aware of the challenges around access and affordability, they established the Barger Family Trustee Scholarship in 2013 to assist students with demonstrated financial need.
Most recently, the couple endowed the Barger Family Fund for Innovation and Entrepreneurship to support a range of business-related educational priorities. Their philanthropy earned the couple a place in the Platinum Circle of the Capital Society at Penn State Harrisburg and, as of 2017, in the Mount Nittany Society.
In addition to their gifts to Penn State, the couple have been generous donors to their church, St. Joan’s of Hershey, Pennsylvania, and longtime supporters of other community organizations.
In recognition of his volunteerism, service and professional achievements, Barger has garnered numerous awards, including the 1982 Penn State Harrisburg Alumni Achievement Award, a 1989 Penn State Alumni Association Alumni Fellow Award, and the 2018 Penn State Alumni Association Philip Philip Mitchell Alumni Service Award.
Donors like Bill and Jan Lane and Rick and Patty Barger advance the University’s historic land-grant mission to serve and lead. Through philanthropy, alumni and friends are helping students to join the Penn State family and prepare for lifelong success; driving research, outreach and economic development that grow our shared strength and readiness for the future; and increasing the University’s impact for families, patients and communities across the commonwealth and around the world. Learn more by visiting raise.psu.edu.