Skip Navigation

J. Willard Marriott, Jr. Professorship in Ophthalmology

J.W. MARRIOTT JR. is Executive Chairman and Chairman of the Board of Marriott International, Inc., the largest lodging company in the world. Mr. Marriott’s leadership spans more than 60 years, as he guided what was once a family-run root beer stand and restaurant to a global hospitality company that is today comprised of more than 7,300 properties across 30 brands in 134 countries and territories. In September 2016, Marriott finalized its largest acquisition ever, acquiring Starwood Hotels and Resorts. Mr. Marriott served 40 years as Marriott’s Chief Executive Officer, before stepping down on March 31, 2012.

Mr. Marriott’s passion for the hospitality industry began at an early age. He spent his high school and college years working in a variety of positions in the family’s Hot Shoppes restaurant chain. He became a full-time associate in 1956, and soon afterward began managing the first Marriott hotel. He became President of the company in 1964 and Chief Executive Officer in 1972. He was elected Chairman of the Board in 1985.

Throughout his career, Mr. Marriott has been known industry-wide for his hands-on management style, which is built on his parents’ chief core value of putting people first. The Marriott corporate culture emphasizes the value that associates bring to the organization. Today, there are more than 730,000 people who wear a Marriott name badge worldwide.

Mr. Marriott is also known as a lodging innovator – shifting the company’s business model in the late 1970s from hotel ownership to property management and franchising. His strategic decision allowed the company to accelerate its growth and broaden its leadership position. That transformation culminated in the company’s split in 1993 into Marriott International – a hotel management and franchising company headed by Mr. Marriott – and Host Marriott International, a hotel ownership company chaired by his brother, Richard Marriott.

In January 2007, Marriott on the Move, one of the first regular corporate CEO blogs was launched. Mr. Marriott’s award-winning blog extends further his global reach and influence that complements his well-known visits to hundreds of hotels annually.

Mr. Marriott serves on the board of trustees of The J. Willard & Alice S. Marriott Foundation. He is a former member of the Executive Committee of the World Travel & Tourism Council, as well as has served on the Board of Trustees of the National Geographic Society and as a director of the U.S. Naval Academy Foundation. Previously, Mr. Marriott was chairman of the President’s Export Council, as well as served on the board of General Motors and the Mayo Clinic.

Mr. Marriott grew up in the Washington, D.C. area, where he attended St. Albans School. At the University of Utah he earned a bachelor’s degree in banking and finance, and went on to serve as an officer in the United States Navy. Mr. Marriott is an active member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. He is married to the former Donna Garff. They are the parents of four children and have 15 grandchildren as well as 25 great-grandchildren.

Alan C. Woods, M.D., Professorship in Ophthalmology

WoodsAlanALAN CHURCHILL WOODS, A&S 1910, Med 1914, was the second director of the Wilmer Ophthalmological Institute. It was one of Dr. Woods’ early patients who proposed and made possible the creation of a large center for ophthalmology at Johns Hopkins, along with patients of William H. Wilmer–the institute’s first director and namesake. After service as an Army physician, Dr. Woods joined the medical practice of his father, also an ophthalmologist, in Baltimore. He then became a Hopkins faculty member, rising to the rank of professor and, in 1934, succeeding Dr. Wilmer as director. Dr. Woods served as the Wilmer Institute’s head until 1955. Well known for influential research on uveitis, an ocular inflammation, he published Edogenous Inflammations of the Uveal Tract in 1961, incorporating new evidence that previous exposure to histoplasmosis was a contributing factor in certain macular lesions. Dr. Woods died in 1963.

 

CHAIRHOLDER TO BE NAMED