Wilbur Fellows Programs
“Nurturing the Moral Imagination among Those Who Write and Read”
A Residential Fellowship Program Unlike Any Other
The Wilbur Fellows Program has been in continuous operation for nearly forty years. It counts among its numbers hundreds of alumni currently teaching at secondary and university levels, as well as publishers and editors, officers in the services, business and legal professionals, and religious leaders.
The Kirk Center’s Residential Fellows Program affords students and scholars the ideal conditions in which they can conduct important research and writing. Fellows write books, essays, reviews, and theses while staying at Piety Hill for periods ranging from a few months to one year. Frequent in-house seminars formalize an already close and stimulating intellectual environment.
Since 1979, the Wilbur Fellowship Program has been central to the Mecosta experience for hundreds of students and professors. The program is named for Marguerite Eyer Wilbur, who was born in 1889, graduated from Stanford and the University of Southern California, and subsequently enjoyed an active career advancing the fine arts and the craft of writing. She edited five books and translated nine others, including two by Dumas and several about the exploits of Spanish buccaneers and missionaries in early California. She also authored several books, among them a study of the East India Company and biographies of Francis Drake, Philip II, and Thomas Jefferson.
Chief among Mrs. Wilbur’s ambitions was to create a program for assisting writers of promise, a colony for serious thinkers and artists. She was a great admirer of Russell Kirk’s writings, so late in life she asked him to join with her in the creation of a new foundation that aimed to establish a little literary platoon, a place where aspiring writers and thinkers could reside for periods of time to pursue research and other imaginative endeavors. As Kirk put it, “It seems to me that the work of this foundation is the nurturing of the moral imagination among those who write and read.” Mrs. Wilbur’s lawyer, Gary Ricks, followed her as steward of this program and ably guided it until his retirement.
The program they developed to extend that mission is the Wilbur Fellowship Program, an academic community that was centered about the household of Russell and Annette Kirk. To this day, students and scholars come to Piety Hill to reside, study, and write at what is now the Russell Kirk Center for Cultural Renewal, founded after Kirk’s death to institutionalize this unique literary community.
Each year undergraduate and graduate students apply for a residential research and study grant. The awardees come to live and work at the Kirk Center which is comprised of six buildings and is centered on Kirk’s Dutch-barn library and his ancestral house.
The Fellowship Program is currently divided into three parts: Junior Fellows and Graduate Fellows reside in Mecosta while working on educational advancement—an independent study, a thesis, dissertation, or book. They are chosen by completing the application process.
Senior Fellows are teaching professionals or persons in the world of affairs who provide intellectual life to the Center by completing their own projects, often as part of a sabbatical, in addition to participating in and leading Center events. While they often spend a period of time in residence, Senior Fellows are not required to do so and often represent the Center to the greater public.
The Wilbur Fellows Program has been in continuous operation for nearly forty years. It counts among its numbers hundreds of alumni currently teaching at secondary and university levels, as well as publishers and editors, officers in the services, business and legal professionals, and religious leaders.
The Kirk Center has also welcomed as Wilbur Fellows scholars and students from Austria, Britain, France, Holland, Hungary, Germany, Italy, Romania, Yugoslavia, Poland, Russia, and the Czech Republic—giving the Center an important international dimension.
Fellows’ Voices
Recent News and Work from the Wilbur Fellows
Lee Cheek (Wilbur Fellow 1984-1985), Dean of Humanities and Social Sciences, Returns to Full-Time Teaching
Dr. H. Lee Cheek enjoyed a lively experience working with Russell Kirk as a Wilbur Fellow during the 1984-1985 academic year. He recalls many evenings spent studying and helping Dr. Kirk on his literary labors. Kirk once charged the young Lee Cheek to first and foremost, “know your own tradition.” That charge sent Dr. Cheek on a lifetime path of reading and thinking deeply about his own tradition as a Southern Protestant within the larger context of American and Western Civilization. It was then he discovered many of the writers that have meant the most to him. Dr. Cheek began teaching at the college level soon thereafter in 1986.
For the past nearly two decades, Dr. Cheek has been at the helm of administrative duties as Dean of the School of Humanities and Social Sciences as well as Professor of Political Science and History at East Georgia State College. Next year, he is looking forward to a transition back to full-time teaching. As Dr. Cheek phrases it, “this is a proverbial return of the rabbit to the proverbial briar patch. My original and most central mission is to teach and mentor students.” He will continue to serve as the Director of the Correll Scholars Program, the honor college which accepts 20 students each year.
Dr. Cheek’s most recent book, The Founding of the American Republic, will be published by Manchester University Press in 2019. From the Center’s beginnings to the present, Dr. Cheek has been one of its most loyal friends and supporters.
“I have devoted my life to liberal education because I believe it helps order the soul.
In a democratic society, the perpetuation of the social and political order
depends on an educated populace. If a society is to prevail, it must preserve and transmit the spiritual and cultural patrimony that gives it coherence and wholeness.”
– Dr. Lee Cheek
Former Fellows: Reconnect through our Facebook Group