Congressman Brooks was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in 1952, where he served for 42 consecutive years. His outstanding record in the U.S. Congress was punctuated by his efforts on behalf of Lamar. In addition to his assistance in obtaining federal research and study grants and loans for construction, Brooks lent his personal efforts to help students, faculty and staff with problems and opportunities with federal agencies.
Brooks represented the 2nd District of Texas from 1953 through 1966 and the 9th District from 1967 through 1994. Brooks served as chairman of the House Government Operations Committee, the Select Committee on Congressional Operations, the Joint Committee on Congressional Operations, and the Subcommittee on Legislation and National Security. In 1979, Congressman Brooks became the Dean of the Texas Delegation, the member with the longest tenure in the Congress.
After his retirement, Congressman Brooks has continued to receive prestigious awards. On April 23, 2001, NASA Administrator Daniel Goldin presented the agency’s highest honor, the Distinguished Service Medal to Brooks at a ceremony in the John Gray Center of Lamar University. Goldin cited Brooks’ long-standing support of the U.S. space program and praised his role in “strengthening the agency during its formative years”. Goldin, who served as NASA administrator from 1992 until 2002, added “Congressman Brooks took it upon himself to personally deliver support to one of the agency’s key programs: the design, development, and on-orbit assembly of the International Space Station”. In August 2002, Congressman Nick Lampson and a host of distinguished guests honored Brooks with an evening celebration entitled “Tribute to a Legend: A Celebration of the Life and Legacy of U.S. Congressman Jack Brooks”. In November 2002, Government Computer News announced former Congressman Brooks had been selected as the Post Newsweek Tech Media’s civilian executive of the last twenty years. The News cited the 1965 Brooks Act that opened up the government information technology market for competitive contracts.
Jack Brooks’ significant role in the passage of the legislation that created Lamar State College of Technology was a key factor in the decision to name a new $2.6 million dormitory in his honor in 1966. The new hall was concurrently named after another significant political figure in Texas, former Gov. Allan Shivers.
Brooks was honored as a Distinguished Alumnus of Lamar in 1975. The Jack Brooks Center for Government and Public Service was established at LU in 1983 and now houses Brooks’ papers spanning his congressional career. The Center, including a replication of his Washington D.C. office, is on the seventh floor of the Mary and John Gray Library. His impact on Lamar continues through the Jack Brooks Chair in Political Science, which he established in 1997. A statue in his honor adorns the campus quadrangle. A Southeast Texas Legends Endowed Scholarship was established in his honor in 2008.
The Honorable and Mrs. Jack Brooks are members of Lamar’s Spindletop Society, the university’s highest recognition of philanthropic support.
LU issues statement about Jack Brooks' close ties to school
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