Once a CHS band member, today a businessman, board member, and advisor, our inductee from the Class of 1971 is Mr. Alan Lacy. Mr. Lacy represents Cleveland High School honorably in the world of business. Mr. Lacy gained a foundation for his future career through his high school involvement with Beta Club and Key Club. He also participated In the CHS marching and concert bands, as well as a member of the Raider tennis team.
The years of great football and basketball teams during Mr. Lacy’s high school years provide wonderful memories for him as part of the student section. However, his time in band holds the sweetest memories for him. Mr. Lacy was part of the 200 member marching band (out of a total of 800 students in the entire school), which he said was intimidating to the opponents at away football games. Band Director Crill Higgins is someone Mr. Lacy remembers fondly due to his positive influence on the students.
His friend group had the greatest impact of high school, many of whom he still gets together with on occasion. There were about twenty kids who were in honors classes and, for four years, had almost every single class together, making for a very close group. Mr. Lacy states that almost all of them are today enjoying very productive lives.
Mr. Lacy has enjoyed a successful career with several large consumer companies (most notably Kraft Foods and Sears, Roebuck, and Co.). He became the Chairman, President, and Chief Executive Officer of Sears in 2000. At that time, Sears had $41 billion in revenue and over 300,000 employees. He sold the company in 2005. Mr. Lacy continues to be involved in the business world by serving on the boards of Bristol-Myers Squibb Company (pharmaceuticals), Fidelity Funds (investment management), and Dave and Buster’s Entertainment, Inc., (restaurants and amusements). He has also been involved with several not-for-profit organizations, mostly involved in conservation, such as The Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago, the National Parks Conservations Association in D.C., the California Chapter of The Nature Conservancy and the Big Sur Land Trust. He was honored to have been given the Distinguished Alumni Award by Georgia Tech and to have been named as one of 174 Emory Historymakers in conjunction with Emory University’s 175th anniversary. One of his highest honors, however, came from being given a “Key to the City” of Cleveland from Mayor Tom Rowland in 2002. He currently lives in Lake Forest, IL.
We would also like to take this opportunity to announce the Caron and Alan Lacy scholarship offered at Georgia Tech. This scholarship is awarded to undergraduate students who are citizens of the United States and who are graduates of Cleveland High School in Cleveland, Tennessee, with preference given to qualified students with demonstrated financial need. The scholarship shall meet the unmet demonstrated financial need of each recipient. Scholarship may be renewed up to seven additional semesters or until the achievement of a bachelor’s degree, whichever comes first, as long as the student remains in good academic standing. Recipients shall be selected by the Office of Scholarships and Financial Aid.