1913-1989
  Educator, Researcher, Civic Leader
 New Jersey native Joseph F. Volker followed an uncommon path to his life's 
  work. Forced by financial hardship in the Great Depression to abandon his preferred 
  field of the liberal arts and study a specific profession, he chose dentistry, 
  which at the time did not require an undergraduate degree. In 1936, he received 
  a D.D.S from Indiana University and began a hospital internship where he encountered 
  his future wife, Juanita, a nurse. With the help of Carnegie Fellowships, Volker 
  soon added A.B., M.S. and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Rochester, where 
  he became increasingly involved in medical research, though he never lost his 
  love of the liberal arts and broad scholarship. 
  
  By the time he completed his Ph.D. in 1941, Volker already had demonstrated 
  that fluoride could be used to reduce the incidence of dental caries. The discovery 
  dramatically improved preventive dentistry worldwide and led to an array of 
  academic opportunities for Volker. In 1948, he served simultaneously as dean 
  of the Tufts College Dental School and as the founding dean of Birmingham's 
  newly established University of Alabama School of Dentistry. 
  
  Volker soon settled in Birmingham where his record of accomplishments and service 
  prospered. He joined medical teaching teams to help rebuild health-care schools 
  in war-torn Europe. He then worked closely with Dr. Roy Kracke, first dean of 
  the Medical College of Alabama in Birmingham, to nurture long-term plans for 
  the University of Alabama at Birmingham [UAB]. In 1966, he became vice president 
  for Birmingham Affairs and director of the Medical Center. In 1969, he became 
  the first president of UAB, and in 1976, the first chancellor of the three-campus 
  University of Alabama System. Throughout his career, he remained active in research 
  and teaching, and published extensively in a variety of scientific and professional 
  journals. 
  
  Countless honors, including 13 honorary doctorates from universities at home 
  and abroad, rewarded Volker's vision and humanitarian service, but Birmingham 
  itself is perhaps his greatest monument. Through his vision for UAB, he helped 
  lead the city out of its fading industrial past and into a new era of prosperity 
  and international acclaim as a center for medical education and research. 
  
  Three children were born to the Volkers: Joseph F. Volker, Jr., Juanita Ann 
  Volker Hilbers and John Berry Volker.