Brother Rogers
This site is not affiliated with the Mississippi Department of Archives and History. It started in 2014 and is run personally by Brother Rogers, who works at the Mississippi Department of Archives and History. From 1990 to 2016, he was the associate director of the John C. Stennis Center for Public Service in Starkville, Mississippi. Before joining the Stennis Center, Brother served as a legislative assistant to U.S. Representative Donald Payne of New Jersey. Brother graduated magna cum laude in 1987 from the University of Alabama, where he earned a bachelor of arts degree in economics, was inducted into Phi Beta Kappa, and was selected as a Harry S. Truman Scholar from Mississippi. He holds a master's degree in public affairs (MPA) from the Princeton School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University. He grew up in Brandon, Mississippi and was a high school exchange student in Kyoto, Japan.
Brother is active in community affairs. He is a past president and current secretary-treasurer of the Mississippi Historical Society and has served as a board member of both the Mississippi Heritage Trust and the Mississippi Humanities Council. He is a past president of both the Starkville chapter of Parents for Public Schools and Friends of the Oktibbeha County Heritage Museum. He is a past president and past lieutenant governor of the Kiwanis Club of Starkville and past vice president of the Starkville Area Habitat for Humanity affiliate. He is a past president of the United Way of North Central Mississippi and was the 2002 chair of their annual fund raising campaign. Under his leadership, the United Way set a fund raising record. He served eight years as the facilitator for the Race Relations Team of the Starkville Area Chamber of Commerce and is responsible for the Cool Papa Bell historical marker in Starkville. He chaired the Unity Park Committee, which created a park in Starkville to honor Mississippians who have improved race relations in the state. He was a guest columnist for the Starkville Daily News from 1994 to 2017. Brother was a scout leader from 1999 to 2011 and served two three-year terms as chairman of the Troop Committee for Boy Scout Troop 14. He won the 2011 Bert Reed Award for Outstanding Adult Leadership in Troop 14. He has coached youth soccer and youth baseball teams.
Brother won the 2017 Elmer Staats Award from the Harry S. Truman Scholarship Foundation. The award was established in 1993 in honor of Elmer B. Staats, former and long-serving Chair of the Harry S. Truman Scholarship Foundation Board of Trustees. The award goes to a Truman Scholar who exemplifies Mr. Staats's "professionalism, contributions to public service, intellectual and analytical abilities, and integrity and character." Brother served for 20 years on Truman Scholar selection panels in Nashville, was a senior scholar at Truman Scholars Leadership Week, and helped organize numerous events for Truman Scholars, including regional conferences, visiting the USS TRUMAN aircraft carrier, special trips to the Pentagon, and seminars on Capitol Hill.
Brother has won two Awards of Merit from the Mississippi Historical Society -- one for his work on Unity Park in Starkville and another for photographing historical markers across the state.
Brother was an adjunct professor from 2008 to 2014 in the Honors College at the University of Alabama, where he taught a course on women and political leadership. He was a mentor in the Starkville public schools for six years.
In the spring of 2000, he spent four weeks in China with a delegation from Mississippi on a Rotary Group Study Exchange trip. In 2015, Brother toured Turkey with The Institute of Interfaith Dialog. An avid traveler, he has visited six continents, all 50 U.S. state capitals, and 58 of the 63 U.S. national parks. Brother is an avid Alabama football fan. He has read at least one biography of every U.S. president, seen every presidential gravesite, and toured every presidential library.
CONTACT INFORMATION
Brother Rogers
[email protected]
http://www.facebook.com/BrotherRogers
Brother is active in community affairs. He is a past president and current secretary-treasurer of the Mississippi Historical Society and has served as a board member of both the Mississippi Heritage Trust and the Mississippi Humanities Council. He is a past president of both the Starkville chapter of Parents for Public Schools and Friends of the Oktibbeha County Heritage Museum. He is a past president and past lieutenant governor of the Kiwanis Club of Starkville and past vice president of the Starkville Area Habitat for Humanity affiliate. He is a past president of the United Way of North Central Mississippi and was the 2002 chair of their annual fund raising campaign. Under his leadership, the United Way set a fund raising record. He served eight years as the facilitator for the Race Relations Team of the Starkville Area Chamber of Commerce and is responsible for the Cool Papa Bell historical marker in Starkville. He chaired the Unity Park Committee, which created a park in Starkville to honor Mississippians who have improved race relations in the state. He was a guest columnist for the Starkville Daily News from 1994 to 2017. Brother was a scout leader from 1999 to 2011 and served two three-year terms as chairman of the Troop Committee for Boy Scout Troop 14. He won the 2011 Bert Reed Award for Outstanding Adult Leadership in Troop 14. He has coached youth soccer and youth baseball teams.
Brother won the 2017 Elmer Staats Award from the Harry S. Truman Scholarship Foundation. The award was established in 1993 in honor of Elmer B. Staats, former and long-serving Chair of the Harry S. Truman Scholarship Foundation Board of Trustees. The award goes to a Truman Scholar who exemplifies Mr. Staats's "professionalism, contributions to public service, intellectual and analytical abilities, and integrity and character." Brother served for 20 years on Truman Scholar selection panels in Nashville, was a senior scholar at Truman Scholars Leadership Week, and helped organize numerous events for Truman Scholars, including regional conferences, visiting the USS TRUMAN aircraft carrier, special trips to the Pentagon, and seminars on Capitol Hill.
Brother has won two Awards of Merit from the Mississippi Historical Society -- one for his work on Unity Park in Starkville and another for photographing historical markers across the state.
Brother was an adjunct professor from 2008 to 2014 in the Honors College at the University of Alabama, where he taught a course on women and political leadership. He was a mentor in the Starkville public schools for six years.
In the spring of 2000, he spent four weeks in China with a delegation from Mississippi on a Rotary Group Study Exchange trip. In 2015, Brother toured Turkey with The Institute of Interfaith Dialog. An avid traveler, he has visited six continents, all 50 U.S. state capitals, and 58 of the 63 U.S. national parks. Brother is an avid Alabama football fan. He has read at least one biography of every U.S. president, seen every presidential gravesite, and toured every presidential library.
CONTACT INFORMATION
Brother Rogers
[email protected]
http://www.facebook.com/BrotherRogers