Scruggs Family Provides Transformative Support to Ole Miss

Major gifts fund Alumni Center board room, law school initiatives

Two men and two women posed outdoors for a family photo.

OXFORD, Miss. – The Scruggs family has made two gifts totaling $450,000 to University of Mississippi, strengthening both the future Triplett Alumni Center and opportunities for Ole Miss law students.

Of the total commitment, $300,000 will help fund the new $51 million Triplett Alumni Center, while $150,000 will bolster the School of Law's activity fund, supporting student organizations, travel and a speaker series.

Richard Scruggs and his son, Zach Scruggs – both alumni of the School of Law – made the gifts alongside family members. Zach Scruggs, who serves on the Ole Miss Alumni Association executive committee, said he is eager to see the new alumni center take shape.

"It will be a beacon for the university – the first thing students and their families experience on campus," he said. "This further puts Ole Miss ahead of the curve."

The family's philanthropic impact at Ole Miss exceeds $18.9 million, supporting initiatives such as the Scruggs Liberal Arts Enrichment Endowment, Scruggs-Nutt New Faculty Endowment, Richard F. Scruggs Scholarship Endowment and multiple historic preservation and enrichment efforts. The family also sold their home and 10-acre property adjacent to campus to the university at a reduced cost, furthering institutional priorities.

The four-story Triplett Alumni Center will replace the current building with a classic brick structure featuring offices, meeting and event spaces, a hospitality suite and a second-floor balcony overlooking the Grove. It will also house the Office of Admissions, provide a home for the M-Club and connect to The Inn at Ole Miss, creating a hub for visitors, alumni and students.

A rendering showing a group of men and women sitting around a conference table in a meeting room.

The university will recognize a $300,000 gift from the Scruggs family, of Oxford, by naming the executive board room in the new Triplett Alumni Center  in their honor.

The family's commitment will establish the Scruggs Family Executive Board Room, a vital component of the new facility, said Kirk Purdom, CEO of alumni affairs.

"The Scruggs family's visionary generosity will shape our new alumni center, creating a space where leadership, connection and meaningful decisions come together," he said. "The Scruggs Family Executive Board Room will be a lasting place for collaboration and reflection."

Nationwide, student activity funding has faced increased scrutiny and budget constraints. Private giving has become essential to sustaining meaningful student experiences.

The Scruggs family's $150,000 contribution to the law school activity fund will help revive speaker series and strengthen student engagement opportunities. Both Richard and Zach Scruggs credit past campus events for shaping their legal education.

Richard Scruggs recalls attending a 1966 appearance by U.S. Sen. Robert Kennedy in the C.M. "Tad" Smith Coliseum, an event that encouraged thoughtful dialogue across political viewpoints.

"It was great for students to meet international figures firsthand," he said. "The questions were thoughtful, and the answers illuminating. I want to see that kind of event happen again."

As a law student in the late 1990s, Zach Scruggs helped organize a panel on Mississippi's tobacco litigation featuring future Gov. Haley Barbour and attorneys central to the case.

"It was a civil discussion on a hot‑button issue," he said. "Students heard directly from the main players in the litigation."

Zach Scruggs, whose son is an Ole Miss law student, emphasized the potential of the new fund.

"There are so many possibilities for this gift," he said. "It could be a great platform."

Research indicates that students involved in organizations at levels comparable to their classroom engagement are more likely to graduate and develop leadership skills, said Frederick G. Slabach, the school's dean.

"This donation will expand opportunities for mentorship, networking and hands‑on learning through guest speakers, workshops and professional travel," Slabach said. "These experiences enrich what our students gain in the lecture hall."

For more information on supporting the Triplett Alumni Center, contact Mary Kate Skelton, alumni fundraising director, at marykate@olemiss.edu or 601-319-2222.

To learn more about supporting the School of Law, contact Greg Carter, director of development, at gjcarter@olemiss.edu or 662-915-2307.

Top: The Scruggs family – (from left) Zach, Amy, Diane and Richard – have provided major gifts to the university to help construct the new Triplett Alumni Center and to encourage student organizations, travel and the return of a distinguished national speakers forum to the School of Law. The gift to the alumni center will be honored with the naming of the Scruggs Family Executive Board Room. Photo by Bill Dabney.UM Foundation

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March 14, 2026

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