SC State faculty member named to Richland One School District Hall of Fame
Dr. Percy A. Mack is one of five people to receive the honor this year. They also include the late Sen. John L. Scott Jr., an SC State alumnus.
ORANGEBURG, S.C. – Dr. Percy A. Mack, acting chair of the Department of Educational Leadership in South Carolina State University’s College of Education, Humanities and Social Sciences, will be inducted into the Richland One School District One’s Hall of Fame in April.
Mack, the district’s superintendent from 2008-14, is one of five new Hall of Fame members. The inductees also include the late state Sen. John L. Scott Jr., an SC State alumnus, who will be inducted posthumously.
Programs and initiatives launched during his tenure as Richland One’s leader included the C.A. Johnson High School Health Sciences Magnet, the Paideia Model School at Meadowfield Elementary School, and the annual Principal for a Day community engagement initiative. His honors and awards include being named Superintendent of the Year by the National Association of Black School Educators while he was superintendent of the Dayton (Ohio) Public Schools. He was also named the South Carolina School Improvement Council Advocate of the Year.
Mack has been a member of the SC State faculty since 2015. He also serves SC State as an assistant professor of education.
A native of Savannah, Georgia, Mack earned his Bachelor of Science degree from Savannah State University in 1971, his Master of Education degree from the University of Georgia in 1972, his Specialist in Education degree from Georgia State University in 1988, and his Ph.D. from Georgia State University in 2000.
Scott was a 1971 graduate of Richland’s C.A. Johnson High School. He was a loyal son of SC State, having graduated from what was then SC State College with a degree in accounting in 1975.
He served on the Richland County Council and in the South Carolina House of Representatives before he was elected to the State Senate in 2008.
Scott was a strong proponent for education. He led the fight in securing funding for deteriorating buildings for K-12 education and worked to secure millions of dollars in funding for historically black colleges and universities. He was a recipient of The Order of the Palmetto, the state’s highest civilian honor. He died on August 13, 2023.
Along with Mack and Scott, the Hall of Fame class includes Robert T. Bockman, a longtime Richland One volunteer; Bernice G. Scott, who served as a member of the Richland County Council for more than 20 years; and Martha Scott Smith, a former Richland One teacher.
News Media Contact: Sam Watson/Director of University Relations swatson2@scsu.edu / 803-747-1223