

Real estate developer Frank Miller
was among the first to tap the potential of properties
away from the Liberty Square, including the Seaport
development. |
In the current edition of The Princeton Review’s
guidebook to “The 351 Best Colleges,”William
Jewell ranks in the number one position for “town/gown”
relations–the intangible relationship between
an institution of higher learning and the community
in which it is located. Longtime Liberty resident Frank
Miller sensed that special relationship between the
city and the small liberal arts College on the hill
long ago. In recognition of that bond, Miller’s
estate plan included a sizeable gift to establish an
endowed scholarship at the College. Miller,who died
in 1988, was an entrepreneur and a real estate developer
who realized early on the potential for growth and commercial
development that existed within the Liberty community.
He built Liberty’s first shopping center away
from the Square on 152 Highway just east of 291 Highway.
He later added the Westowne and Seaport office developments
and the Westwoods residential community. “Frank
was a pioneer in Liberty real estate,” says Ron
Mullennix, the College’s attorney and an acquaintance
of Frank Miller. “He began development on the
western edge of town when it was a radical notion to
have businesses located away from the Square. But Frank
sensed that there would be opportunities for development
outside of the traditional business district.”
Mullennix remembers Miller as an excellent businessman
and a lover of the game of golf. Miller, who graduated
from Liberty High School, attended William Jewell for
one year before embarking on his business career. “He
had a genuine appreciation for the importance of the
College to the community,” Mullennix says.
“He was a visionary,” says Betty Thompson,
former executive director of the Liberty Area Chamber
of Commerce.“He took a corn field and turned it
into the Westowne development. He was always very supportive
of the business community and anxious for Liberty to
grow.”
Jewell alumnus Ray Brock was a longtime associate
of Miller’s who remembers Frank as “a very
creative person. He did wonderful woodworking, so he
was an artistic guy as well as a good athlete.He was
very imaginative, and always ahead of his time.”
The gift will establish an endowed scholarship in
Frank Miller’s name benefiting graduates of Liberty
High School who will be chosen by the mayor of Liberty,
the president of the Liberty School Board and the president
of the Liberty Area Chamber of Commerce.
Dr. Gordon Kingsley,William Jewell College president
at the time the trust was established and now principal
at Harlaxton College in Grantham, England, remembers
Frank Miller fondly and applauds his generosity to the
College. “Frank Miller was a quiet man and a good
man who cared for the things that truly matter in a
community,” Dr. Kingsley says. “When president
of Jewell, I would call on Frank to ask his help. He
would be courteous and supportive, but he never let
on that he was leaving a sizeable gift to his College.Now,
he continues his legacy of good in a most remarkable
way.”
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