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CLINTON and OKLAHOMA CITY, May 10, 2006 –
Over the course of three decades, Cecil Brown mailed dozens of letters to
the Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation. Tucked inside the envelope were
donations – perhaps $10 for heart disease research or, on occasion, a $100
check to help scientists find treatments for cancer.
While his family and close friends
appreciated Brown’s generosity, they also knew he spent little money on
himself. The Clinton resident drove an older model car, and as a young man,
he was known to eat nothing but beans for weeks on end.
Following his death at age 95, Brown
surprised OMRF with his largest gift: $200,000 from his estate. The
donation, which OMRF received this spring, was the product of oil
investments and mineral rights he’d purchased from Custer County farmers in
the 1940s.
“He always talked about how OMRF was doing
some remarkable things for health,” said Vicki Falconer, Brown’s accountant.
“He was always very high on the research scientists were doing.”
Brown died in August 2005, leaving the bulk
of his estate to OMRF and more than a dozen nieces and nephews. Married
twice, he had no children of his own.
According to Brown’s niece Ruth Jacobs, who
lives in Yukon, her uncle saved his money for the things that mattered most
to him, like charity and family. “He didn’t spend his money foolishly,”
Jacobs said. “There are just certain things that are ingrained in you from
the time you’re born.”
Born in Butler, Okla., in 1909 to Charlie and
Mary Miller Brown, Cecil Brown married Vivah J. Earles in May 1940. After
serving in the Army Air Corps in England, France and southern Germany during
World War II, he returned to Custer City and worked in the insurance
business. At his boss’s encouragement, Brown saved his money and used some
of his wife’s salary as a teacher to buy mineral rights from local farmers.
At times this left the couple with little money for food, except for a bowl
of beans.
“He’d go to the county seat and look up these
guys who had mineral rights,” Jacobs recalled. “And they were tickled to
death to sell it, so they could get insurance for their crops.”
Those first purchases sparked a life-long
interest in investing. During the final years of his life, when Jacobs
visited Brown, she often found him glued to the television, keeping an eye
on the stock market.
Yet Brown always put family first. When Vivah,
his wife of 48 years, was stricken with a rare brain disease in the 1980s
and took up residence in a care facility in Clinton, Brown would visit her
several times a week to feed her lunch.
Following Vivah’s death in 1989, Brown wed
Abbie Cline, a former sweetheart whom he’d dated more than a half-century
earlier. They were married for more than a decade, until Alzheimer’s claimed
Abbie’s life in April 2005.
“Cecil Brown lost two women he loved to brain
disease,” said Tia Jones-Bibbs, OMRF’s director of planned giving. “But he
used his own loss as an opportunity to help future generations. I can’t
imagine a more generous, more far-reaching legacy.”
In recent years, OMRF scientists have made a
series of crucial breakthroughs in Alzheimer’s and other brain diseases. Led
by Jordan Tang, Ph.D., OMRF researchers have identified the enzyme believed
to cause Alzheimer’s and have created a chemical inhibitor to halt the
enzyme. Tang’s team hopes to begin testing an experimental Alzheimer’s drug
in humans in the near future.
Other OMRF researchers are making inroads
against Parkinson’s, Huntington’s and Lou Gehrig’s diseases. And a pair of
OMRF scientists are also exploring a novel treatment for a deadly form of
brain cancer.
A photo of Cecil Brown is available upon
request.
About OMRF:
Celebrating its 60th birthday in 2006, OMRF (www.omrf.org)
is a nonprofit biomedical research institute dedicated to understanding and
curing human disease. Its scientists focus on such critical research areas
as Alzheimer’s disease, cancer, lupus and cardiovascular disease. It is home
to Oklahoma’s only member of the National Academy of Sciences. |