Carr Pritchett Collins, American insurance executive. Recipient Horatio Alger award, 1964, Douglas MacArthur Freedom medal, 1966, Distinguished Alumnus award Southwest State Teachers College, 1966, University medal Hardin-Simmons University, 1967, Holden Plate award American Academy Achievement, 1968, Distinguished American Citizen award Harding College, 1968, American Citizen award Harding College, 1968.
Background
Carr P. Collins, Senior was born on May 12, 1892 in Chester, Texas. His father was Vinson Allen Collins and his mother, Elizabeth (Lizzie) Hopkins. In 1913, he was appointed first secretary of the Texas Industrial Accident Board, which had been founded as a result of legislation sponsored by his father in the Texas Senate.
Education
Student, Southwest State Teachers College, 1909. Doctor of Laws, Baylor University, 1952.
Career
The family moved to Texas from Mississippi in 1854, prior to the American Civil War. His higher education was limited to one year at Southwest Texas State Teachers College (now Texas State University). He then had a long career in insurance.
In 1958, the newly constructed Fidelity Union high rise was the tallest skyscraper west of the Mississippi River.
The company"s rapid growth resulted from a novel employee stock option plan partially devised by. The company was sold to Alliance of Germany for $360,000,000 in 1980.
In the 1930s, he launched a coast-to-coast radio selling campaign for a product called Crazy Crystals, dehydrated minerals from the springs at Mineral Wells, Texas. They were advertised both as being a laxative and as having other healing powers when dissolved in water.
His radio station XEAW was the most powerful station in the country at that time, which he used to market Crazy Crystals.
He also owned the Crazy Water Hotel in Mineral Wells, Texas to accommodate movie stars and celebrities seeking therapeutic treatment. Sales reputedly reached $3 million a year, although the Food and Drug Administration later declared the product (and numerous similar products) fraudulent. In the later decades of his life, he was involved in a number of manufacturing and homebuilding ventures which included Mayflower Estates in Dallas north of Preston Hollow.
He was also involved in Texas politics as a Democrat.
In 1938, he became an advisor to gubernatorial candidate West. Lee O"Daniel. As governor, O"Daniel tried to appoint to the state highway commission, thus breaking the tradition of giving each major section of the state a member.
The Senate voted down. After a bitterly disputed race for the United States Senate in 1941, in which O"Daniel narrowly defeated Lyndon B. Johnson, a Texas Senate investigating committee questioned about a large undeclared gift of radio time to O"Daniel on "s Mexican station, XEAW. claimed that the time was paid for by O"Daniel"s friends but that he could not remember the donors and had kept no records of the contributions.
He was instrumental in the selection of pre-millennialist West. A. Criswell as pastor of the First Baptist Church of Dallas in 1944.
He endowed the Texas Institute of Letters with a $1,000 annual award for the author of the best book about Texas, beginning in 1946. He helped bring Bishop College to Dallas in 1961 and also worked for better housing for African-Americans. His donation of Dallas property to Baylor University in 1961 was the largest gift ever made to the university at that time.
In 1979, he contributed $1 million to establish the Chair of Finance at Baylor.
He died on January 17, 1980.
Achievements
Carr Pritchett Collins has been listed as a noteworthy insurance executive by Marquis Who's Who.
Membership
Donator Carr P. Collins award Texas Institute Letter, 1946, Ruth Collins Hall, Baylor University, 1957, Carr P. Collins Convalescent Care Hospital, Dallas, 1967, Carr P. Collins Chapel, Bishop College, 1967, Carr P. Collins Chair of Foreign Affiars, Howard Payne College, 1966. Past trustee Baylor University, Bishop College, Wadley Blood Research Center, Dallas. Board directors Southern Baptist Convention.
Deacon Baptist Church.
Connections
Married Ruth Woodall, November 21, 1914. Children: James Mitchell, Carr Pritchett, Ruth (Mistress Charles S. Sharp).
Recipient Horatio Alger award, 1964, Douglas MacArthur Freedom medal, 1966, Distinguished Alumnus award Southwest State Teachers College, 1966, University medal Hardin-Simmons University, 1967, Holden Plate award American Academy Achievement, 1968, Distinguished American Citizen award Harding College, 1968, American Citizen award Harding College, 1968.
Recipient Horatio Alger award, 1964, Douglas MacArthur Freedom medal, 1966, Distinguished Alumnus award Southwest State Teachers College, 1966, University medal Hardin-Simmons University, 1967, Holden Plate award American Academy Achievement, 1968, Distinguished American Citizen award Harding College, 1968, American Citizen award Harding College, 1968.