Chesley and Elizabeth Pruet
In the late 1990s, then President Westmoreland began calling for friends of Ouachita
worldwide to pray that a family would fund an endowment for the new School of Christian
Studies. This prayer was answered in 2000 when Chesley and Elizabeth Pruet of El Dorado,
Arkansas, pledged $3 million to endow the school. Out of gratitude for the Pruet’s
generosity, the Ouachita Board of Trustees voted to name the new school the Pruet
School of Christian Studies. "The Pruets are selfless people,” said President Westmoreland
in his announcement of the gift, “but their generosity is legendary.”
Mr. and Mrs. Pruet were indeed well-respected for their contributions to education,
the arts, and health issues. Chesley Pruet was a successful businessman, dealing in
oil and gas as well as ranching. He served in various capacities with such organizations
as the Boys Club of America, the Razorback Foundation, the President’s Advisory Committee
on the Arts, and even as president of the National Cowboy Hall of Fame. Elizabeth
Pruet served as a three-time Ouachita trustee, and was active in such philanthropic
causes as the National Committee for the Performing Arts, the El Dorado Education
Foundation, and the establishment of the South Arkansas Center on Aging.
The Pruets were long-time members of First Baptist Church of El Dorado, and are survived
by two daughters and six grandchildren.