|
Treasurers
of the Institute
| Charles
Henry Dalton |
1865-1867 |
| William
Endicott, Jr. |
1867-1872 |
| John
Cummings |
1872-1889 |
| Lewis
A. Tappan |
1889-1891 |
| George
Wigglesworth |
1891-1907 |
| Francis
R. Hart |
1907-1909, 1913-1921 |
| William
B. Thurber |
1909-1913 |
| Everett
Morss |
1921-1933 |
| Horace
S. Ford |
1934-1950 |
| Joseph
J. Snyder |
1950-1975 (and Vice President) |
| Glenn
P. Strehle |
1975-1986
1986-1994 (and Vice President)
1994-1998 (and Vice President for Finance) |
| Allan
S. Bufferd |
1999-2006 |
| Theresa M. Stone |
2007- (Executive Vice President and Treasurer) |
The
Office of the Treasurer is responsible for stewardship of the financial
resources of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Corporation
and is concerned with the financial aspects of the Institute's operations,
gifts, plant facilities, and investments. The treasurer is authorized
to sell, transfer, and invest the property of the Corporation. Subject
to the authorization of the Investment Committee, the treasurer
appoints an investment manager, or managers, who administers the
financial assets of the Institute on a day-to-day basis. The treasurer
also serves as an ex officio member of the Investment and Development
Committees and of the Corporation. The Institute's financial transactions
are summarized annually by the Office of the Treasurer in the MIT
Treasurer's Report.
The
treasurer is one of the principal officers of MIT, along with the
chairman of the Corporation, the president, and the secretary. The
treasurer reports to the Corporation, generally at the annual meeting,
and to the Executive Committee of the Corporation. The treasurer
also reports regularly to the Investment Committee regarding their
investments.
The
position of the treasurer was created when the Institute was incorporated
in 1861. The first treasurer was Charles Henry Dalton. Like the
other principal officers of the Institute, Dalton was appointed
by a five-member nominating committee. He was charged with keeping
an account of all moneys received and expended for the use of the
Institute. He was authorized to make disbursements only upon vouchers,
approved by the Committee of Finance, which also advised him in
the care and investment of the Corporation's funds. He was required
to report to the Corporation semi-annually, or more often, and to
the Institute annually.
The
primary responsibilities of the treasurer included preparing the
annual budget, overseeing the purchase and sale of securities and
real estate, managing property insurance policies, mortgages, leases
and building contracts, and administering bequests and scholarship
funds. Although the bursar handled the routine finances of the Institute,
particularly difficult problems regarding salaries, pensions, and
individual scholarships were referred to the treasurer. By 1883,
the treasurer was appointed by the Executive Committee.
In
1892 an executive subcommittee, consisting of two committee members,
was appointed to assist the treasurer in the preparation of the
budget. The treasurer would solicit annual budget requests from
each academic department, and the Budget Committee would submit
recommendations for budget appropriations for departmental expenses
and salaries to the Executive Committee for approval. Because of
his intimate knowledge of Institute finances, the treasurer was
routinely appointed to other committees such as the Technological
Fund Committee, 1904-1907; the Site Committee, formed in 1906 to
find a new location for the MIT campus; the Income Fund, formed
in the same year to secure funds for the project; and the Presidential
Search Committee, formed in 1907.
By
1906 the payment of salaries and the authorized borrowing of funds
were specifically listed among the responsibilities of the treasurer.
By 1934 the financial agent of the Institute Corporation was appointed
by the Finance Committee, of which the treasurer was an ex officio
member.
The
ever-increasing need for the Institute to raise money to enlarge
endowed and permanent funds rendered the investment returns on the
Institute's assets extremely important. In 1952 the senior administration
of the Corporation was restructured to include both a financial
vice president and an academic vice president. Joseph J. Snyder,
appointed treasurer in 1950, became vice president and treasurer.
In
1973 the Corporation Executive Committee redesignated the functions
of the treasurer, separating them from the management of financial
operations which report to the vice president for fiscal relations
(later the vice president for financial operations). The treasurer
of the Corporation became solely responsible for the stewardship
and enhancement of the Institute's assets and investments. The vice
president for financial operations had responsibility for the Comptroller,
Accounting, Finance, Lincoln Laboratory Fiscal Office, and the Office
of Sponsored Programs. As a result, the treasurer reported jointly
in the MIT Annual Report to the President with the vice president
for financial operations.
In
1974 the sale, transfer, or investment of Corporation property was
governed by the policies and procedures set down by an Investment
Committee. This committee consisted of the chairman of the Corporation
and the treasurer, ex officio, plus five members and two rotating
members of the Corporation and could be chaired by any of the nine
members. The treasurer was required to report to the Investment
Committee and the vice president for financial operations.
In
1986 the vice president for resource development retired, and the
responsibilities for that office were transferred to the incumbent
treasurer, Glenn P. Strehle. Strehle then became vice president
and treasurer. As treasurer, he had become involved in the cultivation
and solicitation of numerous important donors and was responsible
for the processing of gifts to the Institute through the recording
secretary's office. With the new appointment, Strehle devoted the majority
of his efforts to the management of resource development and the
deputy treasurer and director of investments, Allan S. Bufferd,
assumed day-to-day responsibility for operations of the treasurer's
office.
In
1994 the senior administration of the Institute was reorganized
and Glenn Strehle became vice president for finance and treasurer. The Office
of the Treasurer was organized under two functional components:
capital gifts and investments. The Office of Capital Gifts and Legal
Affairs became responsible for managing capital gifts. The Office
of the Deputy Treasurer for Investments became responsible for managing
investments.
With Allan Bufferd's retirement in 2006, the MIT treasurer and investment functions were split into two positions. The treasurer's function became part of the responsibilities of the executive vice president for finance and administration. Theresa M. Stone was appointed executive vice president and treasurer effective February 2007.
The
treasurer is an ex officio member of the following Corporation committees:
Development Committee, Executive Committee, and Investment Committee.
Prepared
by the Institute Archives, MIT Libraries
November 1995; updated 2008
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