
{"articleDetail":{"publishDateDisplay":"February 12, 2026","summary":"Charles \"quot;Chuck\"quot; Fuget &#8217;51, PhD, former chemistry professor and physics department chair, influenced institutions and individuals far beyond Geneva&#8217;s campus through his excellence in STEM and leadership in higher education.","image":"site://geneva.edu/stories/_assets/fuget-web-header-2.jpg","tagItems":"[Archives, Faculty Feature, Chemistry-Math-Physics]","articleText":"The 2026 Black History Month theme,&#160;&#8220;A Century of Black History Commemorations,&#8221;&#160;invites reflection on the people whose lives have shaped lasting change. Among them is Charles R. Fuget &#8217;51, PhD whose scholarship and leadership strengthened STEM programs at Geneva and influenced generations of students far beyond our campus&#160;through his&#160;career in higher education.&#160;\n\nChuck Fuget pictured in the 1951 yearbook.\n\nCharles &#8220;Chuck&#8221; Fuget was raised in Rochester, PA, and attended Geneva College to study chemistry from 1947-51. While a student, Fuget was active in school activities. He was the vice president of&#160;his senior class and&#160;president of the chemistry club during his senior year. He was a member of the YMCA, the chess club, and Geneva&#8217;s&#160;track team, in which he was a standout performer.&#160;\nFuget&#160;graduated from Geneva in 1951 before&#160;obtaining his master'apos;s and PhD in physical chemistry from Penn State.&#160;He worked as a research chemist for Standard Oil of New Jersey&#160;(which later became Exxon)&#160;until he&#160;joined&#160;Geneva&#8217;s faculty in 1956 as assistant professor&#160;of&#160;chemistry.&#160;He worked in the department when Geneva first received approved status with the American Chemical Society (ACS)&#160;in 1958.&#160;Though he left Geneva for one year in&#160;the early &#8216;60s&#160;to work with the State University of New York in Buffalo, he returned to Geneva in 1964 as&#160;chairman&#160;of the&#160;Department of Physics.&#160;\nHe&#160;was&#160;instrumental&#160;in the growth of the&#160;physics&#160;department&#160;during&#160;his tenure.&#160;Under&#160;Fuget'apos;s leadership, the&#160;department received&#160;a grant&#160;from the Atomic Energy Commission, the National Science Foundation, the Oak Ridge Associated Universities, the Duquesne Light Company, Ohio&#160;Edison&#160;and Pennsylvania Power Company, and the US Atomic Energy Commission.&#160;As part of this grant program, called &#8220;This Atomic World,&#8221; Fuget served as state coordinator&#160;to&#160;conduct high school and community programs on the use of atomic energy. Geneva was one of the few small colleges in the nation to receive this recognition.&#160;\n&#8220;Dr. Fuget was one of our heroes,&#8221; shares two former students, Sally (Brown) &#8216;64 and Howard Peters &#8216;62.&#160;The Peters remember him&#160;as an excellent&#160;teacher who&#160;impacted&#160;the College in amazing ways. Brilliant and interesting, his chemistry courses were&#160;rigorous.&#160;He was the only professor who drove students to other college campuses to join in the American Chemical Society&#8217;s student meetings.&#160;Fuget&#160;attended the couple&#8217;s 1964 wedding and wrote recommendations for Howard&#160;for&#160;his post-college job at Gulf Oil near Pittsburgh and&#160;again&#160;for&#160;admission&#160;to Stanford&#160;University&#160;for a graduate program in chemistry. The Peters remember Fuget&#160;to be their&#160;first&#160;Black professor at Geneva. They remained in touch with him until his passing, having reconnected after he retired near them in California.\n\n1969 issue of The Cabinet.\n\nFuget&#160;remained on faculty at Geneva&#160;until 1970, at which time he accepted the position of director of the Division of Natural Science and Mathematics at Indiana University of Pennsylvania.&#160;According to a 1970 issue of&#160;The Cabinet, Fuget&#8217;s new role gave him primary responsibility for the administration of five academic departments, which employed around 100 faculty members&#160;in&#160;biology, chemistry, physics, mathematics, and geo-science.&#160;He retired from IUP as dean of the College of Natural Sciences and Mathematics in 1988 after 17 years of service, later returning&#160;from 1991-92&#160;as interim president&#160;of the university.&#160;\nHe&#160;also&#160;served for&#160;six years as deputy secretary and commissioner for postsecondary and higher education for the Pennsylvania Department of Education, from which he retired in 1991.&#160;In the&#160;role, Fuget acted as chief policy advisor for postsecondary education&#160;and supervised offices responsible for equal educational opportunity, teacher preparation and certification, postsecondary services, adult basic and literacy education, and correction education.&#160;&#160;\nIn 2002, he&#160;used&#160;his decades of experience in higher education&#160;as interim president&#160;at&#160;Bennett College in North Carolina&#160;(where&#160;he had previously served as&#160;special assistant to the president).&#160;A few years later, in 2004, he served as interim president&#160;of&#160;Fisk University in Nashville, Tennessee.&#160;Fuget&#8217;s administrative&#160;capabilities,&#160;leadership&#160;excellence, and&#160;good-natured&#160;personality&#160;were a blessing to many&#160;impacted&#160;by his presence in higher education.&#160;\nFuget was&#160;also&#160;active in the United Methodist Church, engaged in various roles throughout his years&#160;including service&#160;on&#160;the board of higher education and ministry in the denomination.&#160;\nIn 1974, Geneva awarded Fuget with the Distinguished Service Award,&#160;which&#160;celebrates&#160;alumni&#160;who embody the principles for which Geneva College stands and whose efforts on behalf of the college, community, and nation have been exemplary. Sixteen years later, in&#160;1990,&#160;Fuget was awarded an honorary Doctor of Science from Geneva.&#160;\n\nFrom Pro Christo et Patria book, featuring three Geneva physicists: John Pinkerton, John Schaefer, and Charles Fuget.\n\nGeneva celebrated 40 years of American Chemistry Society approval in 1998, marked by a ceremony which included a $4,000 donation to the ACS Scholars Program &#8211; the first gift from a higher education institution in support of the program. Geneva&#8217;s then-president John H. White presented the donation, explaining that &#8220;the gift represents a continuation of the school&#8217;s tradition of providing education and support for African American students.&#8221; To honor this ACS milestone, as well as Geneva&#8217;s 150 years of Christian higher education, Howard and Sally Peters organized the Geneva Chemistry Event in October 1998 on Geneva&#8217;s campus, at which three presidents from the National Chemistry Association were in attendance as well as Fuget, who traveled in from Detroit, Michigan.&#160;\nFormer&#160;chairman&#160;of the chemistry department, Dave Badger &#8216;64, PhD recalls having two-thirds of his chemistry classes with Fuget, who he remembers as &#8220;a great teacher and a great person.&#8221;&#160;\nDr. Charles Fuget passed&#160;away&#160;in 2016,&#160;yet his commitment to shaping the future through education&#160;endures through the institutions, programs, and lives he&#160;impacted&#160;throughout his career.\nHistorical information sourced by Kae H. Kirkwood 'apos;83, Geneva College Archival Librarian.\nSources include:\n\nFisk/Imes: 100 Year of Building the Black Scientific Workforce Program Guide\nA Geneva College Tradition: 150 Years of Christian Higher Education &amp; 40 Years of ACS Approval","author":null,"publishDate":"2026-02-12","type":"Stories","title":"Charles R. Fuget: A Legacy of Scientific Leadership and Educational Impact","imageDesc":"","url":"/article/charles-fuget","blogCategories":"","id":"29902f86ac0a240420866b76c9fefdee","detailUrl":"/stories/2026/02/charles-fuget.json","sourcePath":null,"slug":"charles-fuget"}}
