Ted Kendall III

by | Nov 8, 2021 | Foundation Board Spotlights

Hinds Community College will honor four former athletes and one retired coach in the annual Sports Hall of Fame induction ceremony at 4:30 p.m. Oct. 24 at Cain-Cochran Hall on the Raymond Campus.

The 2024 inductees are Kelli East Dyess of Madison, Nic Henderson of New Orleans, Michael Myers of Oak Point, Texas, Dot Easterwood Murphy of Raymond and Mark Smith of Madison. Admission is free to the induction ceremony and the public is invited. For information, contact Sydney Love at 601.857.3350 or Sydney.Love@hindscc.edu.

KELLI EAST DYESS

Women’s Soccer and Softball, 1998-2000

Kelli Dyess came to Raymond in 1998 and made her mark as a dual-sport athlete for the women’s soccer and softball programs.

Dyess played midfielder for the Hinds Women’s soccer team that won back-to-back state championships in 1999 and 2000. She also played shortstop for the Hinds Softball team in 1999 and 2000. Additionally, she was chosen for All-State and All-Region 23 in both of her years at Hinds. She was named the Most Valuable Offensive Player and was a National Junior College Athletic Association All-American in 1998. During the 1999 season, she was voted “Wittiest” by her Women’s Soccer teammates.

Dyess currently serves as the Behavior Coordinator and Specialist at Madison County Schools. With over 16 years of experience in the classroom and in the behavioral field, she holds an Associate of Arts from Hinds Community College, a Bachelor of Science in psychology and a Master of Science in Marriage and Family Therapy with an emphasis in behavior research from the University of Southern Mississippi. She is also an expert educator with a Specialist Degree in educational leadership. Prior to her current role with Madison County Schools, Dyess served as a mental health therapist trained in psychotherapy, which includes diagnosing and treating mental and emotional disorders in the school-based setting.

She has also served as a university supervisor at Mississippi State University. She most recently served as a keynote speaker at the Mississippi Association of Elementary School Administrators conference fulfilling her passion in sharing her knowledge in instructional and behavioral leadership. She specializes in collaborating with teachers, administrators, parents, and students by combining her expertise and experience in behavioral interventions with best practices to serve those with complex behavior difficulties.

NIC HENDERSON

Men’s Soccer, 2000-2002

Nic Henderson came to Hinds in 2000 and made an impact for the Men’s Soccer program.Henderson was a member of two State Championship soccer teams at Hinds and helped lead the team to an overall record of 31-8-2 over the course of his community college career.

After his two years at Hinds, he transferred to the University of North Carolina at Pembroke. He played as a defender for the Braves for two seasons and helped lead the Braves to two consecutive winning seasons. After his collegiate eligibility was up, he traveled to Germany to play for SKV-Rutesheim in the German 5th Division.

After one season of playing overseas, he returned to Mississippi and accepted the job as the Head Boy’s and Girl’s Soccer Coach at Jackson Academy in August 2005. In his time at JA, he led the girls’ team to the State Championship in 2010 and lead the boys’ team to the State Championship in consecutive years 2007, 2008, 2009 and 2010.

While working at Jackson Academy, Henderson also worked as a youth soccer coach for Jackson Futbol Club. In this capacity, he won Mississippi Youth Soccer State Championships in 2006, 2007, 2008, 2011 and 2012 coaching boys and girls teams ranging in ages from 10-15 years old. His favorite moment as a coach was seeing his son score his first goal.

In May 2015, Henderson stepped down from his role at Jackson Academy to pursue a career in Real Estate. He has since moved with his beloved wife Carrie, and their son Clark, to New Orleans where he works as an Onboarding Strategist for NoteSchool.

MICHAEL MYERS

Football, 1994-1995

Vicksburg native Michael Myers came to Hinds Community College in 1994 and started his collegiate career on the defensive line.

After graduating from Vicksburg High School, Myers was a member of the 1994 and 1995 football teams at Hinds. As a freshman, he posted 46 tackles (14 TFL), 25 QB hurries, three forced fumbles, two fumble recoveries and a record of 20 sacks. The next year, he collected 63 tackles (16 TFL), eight sacks, 27 quarterback hurries, five forced fumbles and three fumble recoveries. Additionally, he was a two-time National Junior College Athletic Association All-American.

After his time with Hinds was completed, Myers transferred to the University of Alabama to play for the Crimson Tide. His collegiate career was marked by numerous achievements, showcasing his remarkable skills of commitment and excellence. He was a First Team All-American and an All-SEC player in 1996.

Myers enjoyed a 10-year NFL Career with the Dallas Cowboys, Denver Broncos, Cleveland Browns and the Cincinnati Bengals. He played 138 games in the NFL, registering 321 tackles, 15.5 sacks and an interception. Despite his achievements at the highest level, Myers has never forgotten his roots and the fundamentals that he received at Hinds Community College. At the conclusion of his playing career in 2012, he came back to Hinds and served as a Graduate Assistant, while he pursued his master’s degree.

He is currently working on real estate investments while also enjoying watching his two children achieve their goals as collegiate student-athletes.

DOT EASTERWOOD MURPHY

Assistant Football Coach, 1984-2004, 2009-2012

Dot Murphy came to Hinds in 1984 where she made history by becoming the first female football coach in the National Junior College Athletic Association (NJCAA), working for the Hinds Athletic Department for 33 years. The National Football League (NFL) did a documentary on Coach Murphy for being the first female football coach at the collegiate level. The film was released in fall 1996 and received an EMMY for the Best Documentary.

During her high school career, she played basketball for the Starkville High School Yellowjackets, winning two state championships and an overall championship. She was a two-time All-State winner, named the Team Captain for the Mississippi All-Star Basketball game and was awarded the most outstanding offensive player in the game. Murphy scored 2,772 points in three years at SHS and averaged 33 points per game.

At the Mississippi University for Women, she was the first player to eclipse 1,000 career points and averaged better than 22 points per game for her four-year career.
Murphy earned a spot on the United States’ World University Games team in 1972 and 1973, culminating in the first-ever women’s entry in 1973 in Moscow. With The W coach Jill Upton at the helm, the U.S. team won a silver medal.

Her hometown of Starkville proclaimed Dot Easterwood Day on Sept. 21, 1973, and she also was the youngest person at the time to receive the Mississippi Outstanding Citizen Award in 1973. Murphy earned All-American honors in 1974. She later attended Mississippi State University where she met her future husband, Gene Murphy.

Murphy was an assistant coach for the University of Tennessee-Martin women’s basketball team in 1975-1976. Later that year, Itawamba Community College hired her as their Head Women’s Basketball Coach. Murphy was head coach at the W from 1977 to 1982.

Murphy was hired by Hinds as the wide receivers football coach in August 1984. She was a member of the football coaching staff that played for 10 State and Regional
Championships, winning six. Additionally, she coached many NJCAA All-Americans and NFL players over her career and
helped lead Hinds to nine NJCAA bowl games.

She and retired Athletic Director Gene Murphy have three children and seven grandchildren.

Mark Smith

Footbal 1994

Mark Smith came to Hinds in 1994 and was an immediate impact football player for the Hinds football program.

After graduating from Vicksburg High School, Smith played one season for Navarro Community College, where he was the no. 1 defensive player in the nation, before transferring to Hinds where he played his sophomore season. He was a part of a defensive unit that was certain to always be remembered as one of the best to ever play in Mississippi community college football.

He helped to lead the Hinds defense to the No. 1 ranked rushing defense and the No. 2 ranked overall defense in the nation. During the 1994 season, Hinds lost the first game to Itawamba and then came back to win the rest of the regular season and went on to beat Itawamba in the State and Region Championship at the conclusion of the season. Smith was a Junior College All-American at Hinds and one of the top linebackers in the country.

After Hinds, Smith signed with Auburn University and played on the defensive line for the Tigers for two seasons. Smith was drafted in the seventh round of the 1997 NFL Draft. He was selected by the Arizona Cardinals, first playing for the All-Rookie Team. He played with the Cardinals for four seasons.

After his time with the Cardinals came to an end, he finished his six-year NFL career with the Cleveland Browns. Over the course of his career in the NFL, he tallied 191 total tackles, 20 sacks and two forced fumbles.
Smith is currently retired and is residing in Madison.

 

Ted Kendall III’s family is so intertwined with the history of Hinds Community College that it is impossible to tell the college’s story fully without talking about his family.

After serving the college in some capacity for more than 50 years, Kendall is rotating off the Hinds Community College Foundation Board of Directors in December after serving multiple terms. Before that, from 1968 to 1988, he was a member of the college’s Board of Trustees, serving as its president beginning in 1977.

To many people, he is best known for twisting the arm of then-Meridian school Superintendent Dr. Clyde Muse to submit an application to become president in 1978, resulting in a tenure that lasted until June 30, 2020. But the behind-the-scenes influence of Kendall and his family is far greater than that one achievement.

Beginning in 1933, Kendall’s grandfather F.M. Greaves served 35 years on the college’s Board of Trustees, including 24 years as president. After he was killed in a car accident at age 85, Kendall succeeded him on the board.

Ted Kendall holding a portrait of his grandfather, F.M. Greaves.

Together, the two of them have served the college in some way for 88 years, most of the life of the college that was established in 1917.

Like Kendall today, Greaves was part of the family-owned companies, The Gaddis Farms and Gaddis-McLaurin Inc. These companies included farm land, a cotton gin, cattle and a store in Bolton.

Kendall said his grandfather “realized the value of the junior college, now community college, and what it meant to all the people in the area and what it meant to the students for whom, perhaps, it would be their only opportunity to go past a high school education. “Hinds has really raised the education level of the whole population. It wouldn’t have happened without Hinds,” he said.

Hinds Vice President Randall Harris (1989), a City of Raymond alderman and a lifelong Hinds County resident, has known Kendall his entire life.

“Mr. Kendall’s family has had a far- reaching impact on the growth of the college. As an alderman, I very much appreciate all the things Mr. Kendall and his family have done for Hinds and our community,” Harris said. “I will always remember and value the tremendous influence he has been for me personally and our area.”

Harris said Kendall’s support was not limited to just the college. “He has also been instrumental in supporting various organizations such as Andrew Jackson Council of Boy Scouts and Hinds County 4-H.”

A 1958 Mississippi State graduate who served as student body president, Kendall returned home and began to learn to run the family business. He and Clyde Muse met when they served together on the college’s Board of Trustees, when Muse was Hinds County school superintendent from 1969 to 1971.

By the time Dr. Robert Mayo announced he would retire in June 1978, Dr. Muse and his family had moved and were settled in at Meridian.

“One of the few little things I did for Hinds was bringing Dr. Muse back to Hinds,” Kendall said. “We had to advertise nationally. We had 100 applicants for the job. We didn’t interview but four.”

For Kendall, the selection of Dr. Muse as president was obvious. “There wasn’t any question in my mind. He did a great job. It worked out just right.”

Over the years, Kendall and Dr. Muse collaborated on many projects together. One of those was the establishment of the Bull Test Station.

“Since my life was agriculture I was real interested in it,” Kendall said. “A lot of the cattle producers said we needed a bull test station somewhere in the state. We went out to Oklahoma State to see theirs, came back and set out to try to create one.”

The Bull Test Station is important to help cattle farmers to understand the genetic strength of a bull and to increase production. “You can’t look at a bull and tell what the performance would be in his offspring,” he said.

The Bull Test Station is located at the Ted Kendall III Agricultural Complex off Seven Springs Road near Raymond.

“One of the things that I’m so proud of is that the agricultural complex bears his name,” Dr. Muse said. “I don’t know of a person any more respected throughout this state and this region than Ted Kendall III.”

Kendall, however, argued against it. “I’m a little embarrassed every time I come down the road and I see my name there. That is not what we built it for, to put my name on,” he said.

The two also worked together to merge Utica Junior College and Hinds Junior College in the early 1980s, a delicate task that called for a lot of tact.

“While it was a tough thing on everybody, the people trusted him, they had confidence in him. Luckily through that, I was able to get some trust and confidence but his integrity was so important in that process,” Dr. Muse said.

When the John Bell Williams Airport needed more land to extend its runways to accommodate modern aircraft, Kendall had the company Gaddis-McLaurin sell the land to the college but then turned around and put most of the money back into the Gaddis-McLaurin Scholarship. He also established the F.M. Greaves Scholarship in memory of his grandfather and had a hand in acquiring scholarships from Merchant & Planters and Trustmark banks.

Kendall was also there when the Foundation was first established in 1978, right after Dr. Muse became president, and then became an active board member. The Foundation is the path community members can use to make donations of money and resources to the college, and it, in turns, provides money for scholarships that directly impact students as well as resources for faculty development at the college.

“The Foundation is so important,” Kendall said. “It can do things to help students that can’t be done without the Foundation. It also makes it a lot easier to get support from the community to help Hinds.”

The family legacy of service has continued with both his sons Tom and Ted IV (1979), who have served terms on the Foundation board and continue to support the college and the community of Raymond. Ted IV also attended Hinds and played on the basketball team. Last summer, current President Dr. Stephen Vacik learned one of the people he needed to meet as soon as possible was Ted Kendall.

“When I arrived at Hinds, one of the first questions asked of me was whether I had met Mr. Kendall and that if I hadn’t, he should be first on my list to visit. He was – I did – and I was not disappointed. It was clear from my first conversation that Mr. Kendall cares deeply about Hinds, farming and people. That makes him pretty special in my book,” Dr. Vacik said.