Laney was born in the American South and grew up in Arkansas and Memphis, Tennessee. After graduating from Central High School in Memphis,[2] he earned his B.A. degree in economics at Yale University. His studies were interrupted by service in the United States Army in the late 1940s, when he went to Korea in January 1947 after World War II and the removal of Japanese rule. He served in the Counterintelligence Corps. According to a biography posted on the Emory University website, "He would say later in life that the experience in Korea so changed his thinking about the world, that by the time he returned to Yale to finish his degree, in 1950, he had determined to enter the ministry."[3] Laney then earned a degree from Yale Divinity School in 1954.[3] He later returned to Yale, completing a Ph.D. degree in Christian ethics at Yale Graduate School in 1966.
Career
Laney was ordained as a Methodist minister and served as chaplain at Choate School (now Choate Rosemary Hall) while completing his seminary degree.[3] He served as a church minister in Cincinnati, Ohio for three years, from 1955 to 1958. He then returned to Yale with his wife, Berta Radford Laney, for Korean language study in preparation for entering the mission field. "In 1959, drawn by what he had seen in Korea, Laney returned [there] ... to serve as a Methodist missionary teaching at Yonsei University"[4] in Seoul. In 1964, seeing higher education as another facet of his vocation, he entered Yale Graduate School, where he completed his Ph.D. degree in Christian ethics in just two years. In 1969, only three years after becoming an assistant professor at Vanderbilt Divinity School, Laney was called by Emory to be dean of the Candler School of Theology from 1969 to 1977.[3]
He served as the 17th president[5] of Emory University from 1977[4] to 1993.[3] In 1979, two years after he became the university's president, Emory received an identity-changing $105 million gift from Robert W. Woodruff, the former Coca-Cola Company chairman, and his brother George W. Woodruff.[6] At the time, this was the largest philanthropic gift in U.S. history.[7] Boosted by these resources, and guided by Laney's strategic vision, Emory transformed itself by hiring preeminent faculty, recruiting some of the best students, and raising its academic standing.[6]
Laney has received nearly two dozen honorary degrees from colleges and universities on four continents, including Yale University, Yonsei University in Korea, the University of St. Andrews in Scotland, Africa University, and Emory University. Yonsei University also created the James T. Laney Professorship in International Relations. He received the United States Department of Defense Medal for Distinguished Public Service, the Kangwa Medal for Distinguished Diplomatic Service from the Republic of Korea, the Kellogg Award for Leadership in Higher Education, the Wilbur L. Cross Medal from Yale, the Emory Medal, the General James Van Fleet award from the Korea Society, and the World Methodist Peace Award.[8] Emory University's graduate school, founded in 1919, was renamed The James T. Laney School of Graduate Studies in 2009.[4][5] In 2014, the Candler School of Theology created the James T. and Berta Laney Program in Moral Leadership, which supports an endowed professorship in their name.
Personal
Laney is married to Berta Radford Laney, whom he met when they were in high school. She is the niece of Admiral Arthur Radford, who was appointed by President Dwight D. Eisenhower as the second chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Jim and Berta Laney have five children, the two youngest of whom were born in Seoul, Korea, when the family lived there from 1959 to 1964, during Laney's missionary work.[3] Three of the five children graduated from Emory College, and two received advanced degrees. Laney and his wife have sixteen grandchildren, ten of whom have attended one or more schools at Emory University.[10]
^ abcd"James T. Laney". icasinc.org. Institute for Corean-American Studies. Retrieved 2012-04-19.
^ ab"James T. Laney (1927-)". history.state.gov. Office of the Historian, Bureau of Public Affairs, United States Department of State. Retrieved 2012-04-19.