Correspondence, programs and other materials relating to the development and conferring of the Grawemeyer Awards at the University of Louisville, and an album of letters of appreciation given to Charles Grawemeyer on his retirement from Reliance in 1969.
0.875 linear feet (1 manuscript box and 1 flat box)
Charles Grawemeyer was born in Louisville, Ky., in 1912 to immigrant German parents. He was one of seven children.
His keen investment sense and entrepreneurial spirit shone early. As a 12-year-old, he bought chickens and sold their eggs to neighbors; he convinced other neighbors to sub-lease unused garage space, which he then rented to people needing storage room. The enterprise earned enough for young Grawemeyer to have a garage built for his parents. He also sub-leased this space.
Grawemeyer was a diligent, hard-working high school student bent on traveling east for an engineering degree. The Great Depression sunk his plans. So he chose the affordable, close-to-home option of attending the University of Louisvilleās Speed Scientific School, where he biked to school, unable to afford bus fare. He graduated in 1934.
In his junior year, he met his wife, Lucy, on a blind date. They were married for 57 years and had three daughters.
During that same junior year, he started as a co-op student at a local company, Reliance Paint and Varnish Company. The firm eventually became Reliance Universal, an international coatings company. Grawemeyer advanced from co-op to chairman in a 40-year career at Reliance. In 1967, he retired from the company and the following year founded his own venture, Plastic Parts Inc., in nearby Shelbyville, Ky.
Throughout his life, Grawemeyer was known for asking penetrating questions and for never raising his voice. He was a devoted husband and father, a Presbyterian active in church affairs, and a lover of music, books, art and travel.
A quiet man, unassuming by nature, he has been described as being remarkable by trying to be unremarkable.
His funeral, on Dec. 11, 1993, provided the final glimpse of this remarkably unselfish man. It was populated by Louisville business, civic, church and education leaders-and by weathered farmers in broad brimmed hats, all of whom he had befriended over his lifetime.
Part of the University of Louisville Archives and Special Collections Repository