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Celebrating Faculty and Staff

Duke Appreciation Month puts spotlight on Duke employees

By Elizabeth Michalka

Thursday, April 24, 2008

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Note to Editors: A version of this story originally appeared in Working@Duke.  To visit the Duke Appreciation Month website, click here.

During the annual Duke Appreciation celebration, Duke pays special tribute to faculty and staff. There are more than 2,000 employees celebrating a special milestone this year, including two people who have worked at Duke for 50 years.

These milestone employees are doctors and nurses, faculty members and maintenance mechanics, all who contribute to the effective functioning of the university.  Click here to read some of their stories.

68-year-old Divinity School professor Richard Heitzenrater has his own memories. From the moment Heitzenrater stepped foot on Duke’s campus as a teen-ager, he felt a connection and passion for the place, and his calling, he said.

“During my freshman year at Duke in 1957, I had a work study job in the library,” Heitzenrater said. “I cataloged rare books. The rare book room opened up a whole new world for me.”

As a student at Duke, Heitzenrater discovered a love for books, research and church history. Those interests propelled him to become a leading expert in Methodist church history, particularly John Wesley, an 18th-century leader in the Methodist movement.

He explored Wesley’s life in authentic manuscripts and became best known for interpreting Wesley’s personal diaries and editing the seven-volume, “Journal and Diaries of John Wesley.”

Heitzenrater made a conscious effort to study at Duke. When he was in the seventh grade, his family visited Duke on their way back to New York from Florida. Heitzenrater was in awe of the campus. He received his degrees – two bachelors and a doctorate – from Duke.

After his studies, Heitzenrater cultivated his career at the First United Methodist Church in Butler, Pennsylvania, Centre College of Kentucky and Southern Methodist University in Texas. He returned to Duke in 1993 as professor of church history and Wesley studies at Duke Divinity School. He still depends on Duke’s library for research and teaching support and requires students to complete a traditional research paper, using print sources.

“The idea of coming back to Duke was always in the back of my mind,” Heitzenrater said. “Above all, it was the library here. The librarians in special collections have become my best friends. They are so supportive and will move mountains to get me the materials I need.”

heitzenrater

Richard Heitzenrater 

He’s stayed at Duke because of the support network, and this year, Heitzenrater celebrates 15 years, making him one of hundreds of Duke Stars – faculty and staff celebrating a career milestone. Every May, Duke Stars are recognized during Duke Appreciation, a series of events to celebrate Duke faculty and staff.

“It just makes me thrilled every morning to get up, and I look forward to what’s going to happen every day,” he said.

“I just do the things that I enjoy most – it’s not really work.”