Spend an afternoon with Suzanne Crowell and itâs easy to see why she is this yearâs Anna Horton Ruby Award recipient. Her tenacity and commitment to Christ as a philanthropist and community servant match those of Anna Horton, Biolaâs co-founder and first dean of women.
Crowellâs family lineage runs deep into Biolaâs history and founding. Her late husband, Donald Warren Crowell, was the great nephew of both Lula Crowell, wife of Biola co-founder Lyman Stewart, and Alice Gray Crowell, for whom Biolaâs Conservatory of Music building, Crowell Hall, is named. Since 2005, Crowellâs family name has also been attached to Biolaâs Crowell School of Business, in recognition of her significant support for the university.
âI was very blessed to be put in the same category as Anna Horton,â said Crowell, who received the award at a ceremony in March. âShe was a wonderful woman. I fantasize a lot about meeting Lyman and now, Anna Horton, and Donâs two aunts in heaven. It was neat for me to see that our name is perpetuated on buildings at Biola with their names.â
The award for lifetime commitment and service is given annually to a woman who exemplifies Hortonâs commitment to Biola studentsâ education and spiritual development while offering support for them either financially or relationally.
Crowell has played a major role in the lives of Biola students and the legacy of the university through acts of leadership and generosity. It was soon after her husband passed away in 2004 that she rediscovered her familyâs deep roots with the university and gave the initial gift for Biolaâs Crowell School of Business building, which opened in 2007. The partnership with the business school was fitting, as her father-in-law and husband had built a lasting legacy in business through the familyâs financial management company, Crowell, Weedon and Co., one of the largest independent investment firms in the Western United States. (Her sons Andrew and Donald now lead the company.)
The school that bears her name operates by the motto âbusiness as ministry,â which Crowell has personally exemplified in many different leadership capacities.
As mayor of San Marino, Calif., where she spent eight years on the City Council, Crowell started a prayer group of women whom she deemed âthe San Marino Saintsâ â women who, in her words, âprayed often, long and hardâ for the city. While serving on the board for Harvest Evangelism, Crowell went to Argentina four years in a row to serve and spread the name of Jesus. In 2004, she served as vice president of the executive committee for the Billy Graham Crusade at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, Calif.
She has also served on the boards of Huntington Hospital and the University Kidney Research Organization, and has received numerous accolades, including being named California Senate Woman of the Year in 1991.
âI wouldnât have gotten into most of the roles Iâve been in had I not felt called to do them,â she said. âThe importance is knowing where you came from and having Jesus in your life.â
For Crowell, much of âhaving Jesusâ daily means prayer. A few minutes donât pass without her mentioning the topic â a testament to her faithful walk with God and commitment to follow Godâs leading.
She attributes her marvelously dotted career and ease of moving between different roles to Godâs guidance.
âIf you have a good prayer life, you know when the Lord is saying, âLetâs shift gears,ââ said Crowell.
As someone who has integrated her faith into her career, Crowellâs hope is that Biola graduates will do the same and spread the word of God through their work and vocations. In business, that includes being a person of Christ-like integrity, she said.
âJust be an honorable person,â she said. âPeople pick up on that. They pick up on who you are if they see you in action.â