Posted on May 9, 2024
Source: Farm Progress. The original article is posted here.
Engler’s entrepreneurial journey began at age 12 in Bassett, Neb., when he bought a hundred head of cattle on loan while his dad was away on business. His mother told him to expect a licking when his father got home. Instead, he got a handshake, and his dad told him he was proud of him.
Engler enrolled at the University of Nebraska at age 15 and put himself through college. He studied animal science and graduated in 1951. He began his career as an ag teacher, and then moved on to purchasing cattle and building feedlots. With a partner, he co-founded Cactus Feeders, based in Amarillo, Texas, which grew to become one of the largest cattle-feeding operations in the world. He’s credited with innovations in cattle feeding and improving technology associated with the fed cattle business.
“Paul Engler was a legend in the beef cattle industry and his impact on that industry will be felt for generations to come,” said Tom Field, director of the Engler program who also holds the Engler Chair in Entrepreneurship. “Paul wasn’t just the benefactor of the Engler Agribusiness Entrepreneurship Program. He was a mentor and a friend to our students and our team. The program was built on the principles of grit, determination and passion for work because that’s how Paul lived his life.”
“Paul Engler’s entrepreneurial spirit was forged in rural Nebraska and served him well throughout his life,” said Brian F. Hastings, president and CEO of the University of Nebraska Foundation. “Paul never forgot his roots. He believed in the American dream and generously established the Engler Agribusiness Entrepreneurship Program because he wanted to prepare the next generation of entrepreneurs to make their own positive impact on Nebraska and the world. We are grateful for his generosity but also his personal involvement as a volunteer for the university and as a former member of our foundation board.”
Engler also was a University of Nebraska Foundation Trustee and a member of the Institute of Agriculture and Natural Resources campaign committee for Only in Nebraska: A Campaign for Our University’s Future .
The Engler program — part of the College of Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources — emphasizes learning by doing and takes an individualized approach. The gift established a permanently endowed fund to provide student scholarships, faculty and staff support and other programmatic support, and to create an endowed chair for the director of the Engler program.
In starting the program, Engler, who lived in Amarillo, Texas, said his vision was that students who graduate from the program would return to their communities inspired to build sustainable businesses.
“We need to identify these boys and girls who have that fire in the belly when they are young and then when they come to the university, expose them to a curriculum that teaches risk — how to evaluate it and how to manage it — because if you do not take risk as an entrepreneur, you are not going to make it,” Engler said in 2010.
Among Engler alumni surveyed, 83% said their interest in starting a business in a rural environment increased as a result of being in the Engler program. In a survey of current Engler students, 86% said their Engler experience makes them more likely to become an employer in the future.
“I’m grateful for the vision that Paul Engler had in creating the Engler Agribusiness Entrepreneurship Program,” said Michael Boehm, Harlan Vice Chancellor for the Institute of Agriculture and Natural Resources at UNL and vice president for Agriculture and Natural Resources in the University of Nebraska System. “The Engler program is an extremely popular program in the College of Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources, and it’s serving our students and our state well.”