INDIANAPOLIS — Governor Eric J. Holcomb will present Hoosier humanitarian Dr. George Rapp with the 2019 Sachem Award, the state’s highest honor, at a ceremony Tuesday, Aug. 27.
Rapp and his wife Peggy reside at Lake Wawasee as well as Indianapolis.
“Dr. George Rapp has helped make his hometown, our state and the world a much better place to live through his devotion to the arts, education and medicine,” Holcomb said. “You would be hard-pressed to find someone who has made the kind of impact he has in so many different fields.”
First Lady Janet Holcomb announced Rapp will be this year’s recipient during the Hoosier Art Salon’s 95th annual exhibition preview event Thursday evening at the Indiana State Museum. Rapp, a longtime supporter of the salon, served as a co-host of the event.
The Sachem is given annually to recognize a lifetime of excellence and moral virtue that has brought credit and honor to Indiana. Previous recipients include Holocaust survivor Eva Mozes Kor (2017), Rev. Theodore M. Hesburgh, president emeritus of the University of Notre Dame and world statesman (2006), and long-time businessman and civic leader P.E. MacAllister (2014). Rapp will be the third Sachem honoree named by Holcomb.
A native of New Harmony, Rapp has been a medical pioneer, champion of education and supporter of the arts throughout his life.
An orthopedic surgeon, Rapp practiced for 35 years, serving the majority of that time as chief of orthopedic surgery and the orthopedic residency program at St. Vincent Hospital, clinical professor of orthopedic surgery at Indiana University School of Medicine, and director of the Scoliosis Clinic at Riley Hospital for Children. In those roles, he treated a countless number of patients, including numerous children with scoliosis, and helped train many orthopedic surgery residents. An innovator, Rapp invented a hip prosthesis for total hip replacement and helped found Sofamor Danek, now a division of Medtronic, one of the world’s largest manufacturers of spinal instrumentation.
Rapp’s passion for education has made a global mark. He has provided college scholarships to graduating seniors at New Harmony High School, been a lead fundraiser for the Indiana University School of Medicine, worked with the Indiana University Kenya program to supply volunteer orthopedic surgeons to help further orthopedic education in Africa, and been instrumental in developing surgical suites and housing facilities at Moi University in Eldoret, Kenya.
Since his retirement, Rapp has devoted his life to numerous philanthropic efforts, working with such groups as Crossroads of America Boy Scouts, Indiana Historical Society, the Indiana State Museum and Indiana Landmarks. A proponent of the arts, he helped start the New Harmony Hoosier Salon Art Gallery and the annual “First Brush of Spring” New Harmony Paint Out, now in its 21st year, and helped restore the Ravine Garden at Newfields in Indianapolis.
His life motto is “Do all the good you can, in all the ways you can, for all the people you can, for as long as you can.”
Sachem Background
In 1970, Gov. Edgar D. Whitcomb introduced the “Confederacy of the Sachem,” a group of business, industry, publishing, banking and legal leaders, who served as state hosts welcoming visitors to Indiana and promoting the state’s culture and economy. The organization’s name came from the Algonquin term applied to village leaders, implying wisdom, judgment and grace.
Following Whitcomb’s term, the Sachem project was not pursued, and the organization dissolved in 1989. Whitcomb visited Gov. Mitch Daniels in 2005 to acquaint him with the concept and to give him custody of remaining Sachem funds. Daniels recreated the Sachem to underscore the importance of moral example; achievement alone without exemplary virtue does not qualify a person for this recognition.
Thirteen Sachem awards have been bestowed since the honor was revived in 2005:
· 2005: John Wooden—Legendary college basketball coach, teacher and mentor
· 2006: Rev. Theodore Hesburgh—Former president of the University of Notre Dame and world statesman
· 2007: Jane Blaffer Owen—Philanthropist and preservationist of New Harmony
· 2008: Bill and Gloria Gaither—Grammy winning singer/songwriter duo from Alexandria, Ind.
· 2009: Donald C. “Danny” Danielson—New Castle business and civic leader
· 2010: Carl D. Erskine—Civic leader and legendary baseball player
· 2011: William A. “Bill” Cook—Philanthropist and cofounder of Cook Inc.
· 2012: Ian M. Rolland—CEO of Lincoln National Corp.
· 2013: Don Wolf—Civic leader and CEO of Do It Best Corp.
· 2014: P.E. MacAllister—Long-time businessman and civic leader
· 2015: Amos C. Brown, III—Radio host and civic leader
· 2016: None
· 2017: Eva Mozes Kor—Holocaust survivor; forgiveness and civility advocate
· 2018: Sammy L. Davis—Vietnam veteran, Congressional Medal of Honor recipient
Each Sachem honoree receives a specially designed sculpture capturing the Native American heritage of the Sachem. All Sachem recipients are selected by Indiana’s governor.