This site is dedicated to celebrating the life of Bob Kemble. As a mentor and educator, Bob touched the lives of thousands of people around the world. For those who knew him he made a profound and positive impact. We should all be so fortunate to live a life as rich and fulfilling as Bob’s. Godspeed! – Albuquerque, New Mexico – July 22, 2024
A Brief Summary of Bob’s Life
Charles Robert Kemble (August 17, 1925 – July 22, 2024) was a retired United States Army officer, educator and former President of Lamar University. He served as Executive Assistant to the Director of Operations of the Joint Chiefs of Staff at the Pentagon during the Cuban Missile Crisis. He taught American Studies at the United States Military Academy (USMA) from 1964 to 1972 as a permanent faculty member. In 1972 he moved from West Point to Roswell, New Mexico, where he served as president of the New Mexico Military Institute. In 1977 he accepted the position of president of Lamar University in Beaumont, Texas. In 1987, after returning to New Mexico, he served for three years as the state’s first Cabinet Secretary for Public Safety under Governor Garrey Carruthers.
Early Life and Education
Kemble was born on August 17, 1925, in Ottumwa, Iowa, to Roy H. Kemble and Pauline Kemble (née Hoover). The Kemble family traces its history back to Sarah Siddons (née Kemble) an 18th century actor, and Fanny Kemble, an actor and abolitionist, and niece of Sarah Siddons. His mother’s family, the Hoovers, were second cousins of Herbert Hoover, the 31st president of the United States. Roy Kemble had volunteered as an ambulance driver in France during World War I and was awarded the Croix de Guerre for his services. His family owned and operated the Kemble Floral Company headquartered in Oskaloosa, Iowa and served customers until Roy’s death in 1945. The youngest of three children, at age 16 Kemble applied to the Army Air Corps only to be rejected 4F because of a previously undetected heart murmur. A year later he enlisted in the Army Special Training Program at Kansas University having passed his medical by jumping in place and masking his heart murmur just prior to his examination.
At 17 he enlisted in the regular Army and was deployed to Europe in the summer of 1944. After crossing the Atlantic on the SS Mauritania, Kemble landed in Liverpool and immediately volunteered for and joined the Army’s 82nd Airborne Division. He trained as a paratrooper in Leicestershire and his first deployment in 505th Parachute Infantry Regiment was to Holland as part of Operation Market Garden. Parachuting from a DC-3 on a static line, he tilted his chute to avoid trees, but fractured his pelvis on landing. He then spent the next eight weeks recovering.
In December 1944, at the onset of the Battle of the Bulge, Kemble and the 82nd Airborne were deployed to Bastogne, Belgium. It was in a foxhole in the Ardennes on December 29, 1944, that he was surprised to learn of his appointment to the United States Military Academy. Kemble entered West Point in the autumn of 1945. In his junior year he replaced Brent Scowcroft as manager of the Army football team which continued its longest unbroken winning record in the school’s history.
He met Helen Elizabeth Elfstrom (b. 1923 – d. 2007) on a trip to Washington where he met with Congressman Congressman Karl LeCompte, his sponsor to West Point. At the time Elfstrom was LeCompte’s personal assistant. Shortly after Kemble’s graduation they married on July 03, 1949. They had five children, Christopher (b. 1950), Keith (b. 1952), Cynthia (b. 1954), Geoff (b. 1956) and Carol (b. 1959).
Career
After graduating from the US Military Academy at West Point in 1949 with a BSE, Lieutenant Kemble was assigned to Fort Knox and the Armor Branch school. From there he was deployed to West Germany as part of the 63rd Tank Battalion. As commander of the 1st Armored Division Reconnaissance Troop, he countered incursion threats by East German and Russian troops along the West Germany’s eastern border.
He attended the University of Pennsylvania completing his master’s degree in 1955 and from 1956 to 1960 taught English at the USMA. Between 1960 and 1961 he was deployed to 1st US Corps Staff Headquarters in Korea.
In 1961 he was appointed to the Pentagon as the Executive Assistant to General Ferdinand Thomas Unger, the Director of Operations, the Joint Chiefs of Staff. As a major, Kemble was the lowest ranking officer in the executive office. Kemble served in the Pentagon until October 1963, when he returned to the USMA by Congressional appointment as a permanent member of the faculty teaching American Studies. He received his Doctor of Philosophy Degree in American Studies from George Washington University in 1966.
Post Military Career
Colonel Kemble retired from the Army and accepted the position of President at the New Mexico Military Institute (NMMI) in 1972 and moved to Roswell, New Mexico. As NMMI president he oversaw the transition from a male-only to a co-educational school.
In 1977 he moved to Beaumont, Texas and served as Lamar University’s president for the next seven years. In 1984 the university’s administrative structure changed to a chancellor system and Kemble served for two years as the university’s first chancellor. During his tenure at Lamar, he established the John Gray Institute, served as the president of the Council of Texas University Presidents, and initiated some of first student exchange programs with the People’s Republic of China.
In 1986 Kemble returned to New Mexico and in 1987 became the state’s first Cabinet Secretary for Public Safety under then Governor Garrey Carruthers. He was an active-duty Brigadier General with the National Guard throughout this period until his full retirement in 1990.
Later Years
After retiring from the State of New Mexico, Kemble consulted for Booz Allen Hamilton Company for 17 years. Today, he continues serving as his USMA’s undergraduate class president, a position he held for 74 years.