Leland Thomas Jordan (1906 - 1976)

Leland Thomas Jordan, class of 1929,
was a native of Lufkin, Texas. Known to friends and
colleagues as "L.T.", he was truly an international citizen,
spending more than 30 years in Venezuela and Kuwait.
Mr.
Jordan began his career in the oil fields of Kansas and Oklahoma
during summer breaks from Texas A&M University where he
studied mechanical engineering. He was captain of Battery A
in the Corps of Cadets and was a member of ASME upon graduation
in 1929.
Gulf
Oil Corporation hired Mr. Jordan in 1929 as a production engineer
in the oil fields of Venezuela. By 1945, he was general
manager of Gulf Oil's Western Division in Maracaibo, Venezuela.
Gulf
Oil and the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company, later known as British
Petroleum, created the Kuwait Oil Company, Ltd. and in 1948,
picked Leland Jordan to manage this young company. In
thirteen short years, Mr. Jordan with employees from twenty-nine
countries transformed this company into a highly successful
enterprise.
In
recognition of Mr. Jordan's service to British interests in
Kuwait, Queen Elizabeth II appointed him Honorary Commander of
the Civil Division of the Order of the British Empire in 1958,
and Honorary Knight Commander in 1961, honors rarely conferred
upon a non-British subject.

Upon
retirement in 1962, Mr. Jordan returned to Lufkin with his wife
of 27 years, the former Jessie Wright. He continued to play
an integral role in the affairs of the Kuwait Oil Company and was
actively involved in the Association of Former Students at Texas
A&M University, becoming a charter member of the Century
Club.
Mr. Jordan passed away in 1976 and in his
memory, Mrs. Jordan endowed Texas A&M University with the MSC
L.T. Jordan Institute for International Awareness. Founded
in December of 1986, the Institute serves to foster Mr. Jordan's
spirit of internationalism in the students of this university.

For more insight into the life of the Jordans, please view the L.T. Jordan Collection.
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