Impact

Schmidt commits $250,000 to create scholarship fund at Penn State Berks

New fund will be doubled through University's First-Time Endowed Scholarship Donor Matching Program

Rolf Schmidt, center, recently established a new scholarship for students who enroll in one of Penn State Berks' baccalaureate degree programs upon graduation from Reading Area Community College. He discussed the scholarship with Chancellor R. Keith Hillkirk, left, and David Delozier, director of development and alumni relations. Credit: Penn State. Creative Commons

READING, Pa. — Rolf D. Schmidt, a German immigrant and Berks County entrepreneur, recently committed $250,000 to establish the Schmidt Family Scholarship Fund, a new endowed scholarship for students with demonstrated financial need who enroll in one of Penn State Berks' baccalaureate degree programs upon graduation from Reading Area Community College (RACC).

In addition, as part of Penn State’s new fundraising campaign, "A Greater Penn State for 21st Century Excellence," this gift will be doubled by the University’s First-Time Endowed Scholarship Donor Matching Program to provide a total endowment of $500,000. The program provides a 1:1 match for donors who create their first endowed scholarship at Penn State during the "A Greater Penn State" campaign.

“This agreement positions RACC graduates to leverage their associate degree by enrolling in baccalaureate programs at Penn State Berks once they graduate from RACC,” Schmidt said. “Our goal is to create a logical pathway to success that provides students with encouragement and an incentive to ‘stack’ their educational experience in a way that points them toward first attaining their two- and four-year degree before moving into the workforce, pursuing graduate education or both.”

This new scholarship comes on the heels of a recently signed articulation agreement between Penn State Berks and RACC. On April 13, officials from both institutions signed the agreement, which provides academic pathways to seven baccalaureate degree programs. These academic pathways provide a seamless transfer and serve both institutions’ goals of increasing student retention and degree completion.

“I am so appreciative of Rolf Schmidt’s generosity in creating this scholarship,” said Penn State Berks Chancellor R. Keith Hillkirk. “Each year, an increasing number of students are coming to Penn State Berks having begun their college career at Reading Area Community College. The support that his gift provides will make that transition more affordable for these students.”

According to David Delozier, director of development and alumni relations at Penn State Berks, the new endowed fund will generate close to $25,000 a year for scholarships, which will be available to students as early as the spring semester of 2018.

Schmidt, a German-born immigrant and entrepreneur, has indirect ties to Penn State Berks that go back to his early career at Textile Machine Works in 1964. Previously, Textile Machine Works had opened its own training center, Wyomissing Polytechnic Institute. When changes in the textile industry caused WPI to close its doors, the facilities were offered to Penn State for the establishment of a campus in Berks County.

The changing textile industry also caused Textile Machine Works to look into other areas of manufacture, and the company began making hypodermic needles and suture needles under its new Arrow Products division. Textile Machine Works was sold in 1968 to North American Rockwell, and Rockwell had little interest in the medical business. Subsequently, Schmidt left the firm and in 1970, he and his brother went on to found Sharpoint, a company that manufactured surgical needles.

Sharpoint began in Schmidt’s Mohnton garage. The first commercial building also was in Mohnton, in 1972 — the present site of Unique Technologies Inc., another medical products manufacturer. The company continued to grow and open new plants in Berks County. Then, in 1991, the brothers agreed to a management-led buyout of Sharpoint.

The Schmidts continue to be involved in the medical field, as principals in Unique Technologies Inc. and with interests in other promising technologies.

Schmidt also has ties to RACC; he led the $2.5 million fundraising drive to build RACC's Training and Technology Center, contributing another $1 million himself toward the $10 million project. The center was named in his honor.

Gifts from Penn State’s alumni and friends have been essential to the success of the University’s historic land-grant mission to serve the public good. To fulfill that mission for a new era of rapid change and global connections, the University has begun "A Greater Penn State for 21st Century Excellence," a fast-paced campaign focused on the three key imperatives of a public university. Private support will keep the door to higher education open and enable students to graduate on time and on track to success; create transformative experiences on Penn State campuses and around the globe that tap the full potential of Penn Staters to make a difference; and impact the world through discovery, innovation and entrepreneurship. To learn more, contact Delozier at dcd11@psu.edu or 610-396-6056.

Last Updated September 6, 2017