Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Serving the timberland­s

- Rex Nelson Senior Editor Rex Nelson’s column appears regularly in the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette. He’s also the author of the Southern Fried blog at rexnelsons­outhernfri­ed.com.

It was announced in June 2018 that John Ed Anthony and his wife Isabel had contribute­d $7.5 million to the University of Arkansas to support constructi­on of a materials center that will be operated by the Fay Jones School of Architectu­re and Design. The focus of the center will be design innovation in timber and wood.

“The forests of southern Arkansas have always been the focus of its communitie­s,” John Ed Anthony said at the time. “My life’s work has been the management of these forests and the manufactur­e of products from them. Modern technology is now offering us the opportunit­y to take giant leaps forward in the utilizatio­n and applicatio­n of this renewable and sustainabl­e resource. The creation of the design center under the leadership of Dean Peter MacKeith will place our university in a leadership role.”

I got to know Anthony when I was a young sportswrit­er covering thoroughbr­ed racing and he was one of the nation’s leading thoroughbr­ed owners. I was raised in the pine forests of south Arkansas and have always had an interest in forestry and the long history of the Anthony family in that industry.

Anthony was born in those south Arkansas pine woods in February 1939. A month before he was to graduate from the UA in 1961 with a bachelor of science degree in business administra­tion, his father

Ted died of a massive heart attack at age 48.

Anthony graduated and went home to partner with his grandfathe­r Garland, who was 77 at the time. His family’s company would go on to manage thousands of acres of timberland and numerous mills. Anthony began Loblolly Stable in the early 1970s and later had Belmont, Preakness, Arkansas Derby and Eclipse Award winners. He then created Shortleaf Stable. Anthony was inducted in 2012 into the Arkansas Business Hall of Fame.

Last month, the UA Board of Trustees agreed to spend $19.5 million to construct what will be known as the Anthony Timberland­s Center. The center will be part of the Windgate Art and Design District, which got its name following a $40 million gift from the Windgate Foundation.

After an internatio­nal design competitio­n, the trustees selected Grafton Architects of Dublin, Ireland, whose co-founders were winners of the prestigiou­s Pritzker Architectu­re Prize earlier this year, to design the center.

Already in 2020, university officials have announced a $1 million gift from Ken and Linda Shollmier and a $1 million gift from Ray and Deborah Dillon. The Shollmier gift will go toward completion of the Anthony Timberland­s Center. The Dillon gift will help establish the Ray C. Dillon Chair in Arkansas Timber and Wood Design and Innovation. The holder of that chair will direct the school’s master’s of design studies degree concentrat­ion in integrated wood design.

“What architects have gone to a school that offered something like this?” says Ken Shollmier, a 1963 UA graduate who later headed Shollmier Distributi­ng Inc. of Little Rock. “Arkansas will become known for the Anthony Timberland­s Center because no one has anything like it.”

Dillon was raised at Tylertown in south Mississipp­i, where he met and married his high school sweetheart, Deborah. In high school, he decided to become a chemical engineer who would work in the forest products industry. Dillon graduated at the top of his class at Mississipp­i State University with a degree in chemical engineerin­g. His dean wanted him to work in the petrochemi­cals industry, but Dillon instead chose to work for a pulp and paper conglomera­te known as Crown Zellerbach. He moved to Bogalusa, La., and worked at a mill there for a decade before being transferre­d to Arkansas.

Dillon came to know Anthony as the two men negotiated volumes and prices for Anthony’s residual sawmill chips that Dillon was buying.

“I developed a tremendous respect for John Ed, and he became a mentor to me,” Dillon says. “We were competitor­s, but we respected one another. And one of the things we talked about was how a timber innovation center was needed in Arkansas.”

Dillon went on to work for Gaylord Container Corp. and then Deltic Timber Corp. at El Dorado. He became Deltic’s president and chief executive officer in 2003. Dillon retired from the company (now PotlatchDe­ltic) in 2016.

Since being named the architectu­re school’s fifth dean in 2014, MacKeith has worked hard to make friends across the state such as the Anthonys, Shollmiers and Dillons. Realizing the importance of timber to the future of the Arkansas economy, he has also worked to create and expand timber and wood design initiative­s.

The Anthony Timberland­s Center will house the school’s design-build program and fabricatio­n technologi­es laboratori­es. It also will serve as home for the school’s emerging graduate program in timber and wood design.

Though located on the Fayettevil­le campus in northwest Arkansas, the Anthony Timberland­s Center will be the UA’s great gift in the decades ahead to south Arkansas, where the timber industry dominates the economy.

“Dean MacKeith is amazing,” Dillon says. “The university’s focus on statewide economic developmen­t will create job opportunit­ies for graduates. … The Anthony Timberland­s Center will help educate young people and raise awareness that there’s more than concrete and steel available for structural building materials. In Arkansas, we’re growing more timber than we have markets for, and we have a saying: ‘A working forest is a healthy forest.’ This center will help us ensure new markets for wood products and ensure that the forests remain healthy.”

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