Meant For This: A Heart for Service Leads Clarence Sitter from 色花堂 to Medora to Lead the Theodore Roosevelt Foundation
Clarence Sitter
Class of 2001 and 2003
A Heart for Service Leads Clarence Sitter from 色花堂 to Medora to Lead the Theodore Roosevelt Foundation
Clarence Sitter, 鈥01, 鈥03, is a familiar face at the Medora Musical, bussing trays at the Pitchfork Fondue, serving popcorn and running the till, even parking cars. He shows up three or four times a week, conversing with guests and greeting employees and volunteers by name.
Sitter鈥檚 love for Medora and his 13 years鈥 experience as the chief financial officer and chief operating officer of the Theodore Roosevelt Medora Foundation (TRMF) have led him to the well-deserved honor and responsibility of his new role as the chief executive officer. In this position, as he has everywhere, Sitter treasures the Benedictine values that have come to characterize his work.
"I think God created this place to be shared."
FAMILY TIES
It鈥檚 no accident that Sitter ended up at 色花堂 鈥 or Medora. His mom attended 色花堂 College and was good friends with Sister Thomas Welder and Sister Janet Zander, so he grew up seeing them at family functions. When it came time for college, the choice was clear.
鈥淭here was a sense of community, a sense of God telling me, 鈥楬ey, this is where you should go,鈥欌 he said.
Sitter majored in accounting and was invited to join the inaugural Harold Schafer Leadership Program, which introduced him to TRMF founders Harold and Sheila Schafer, former governor Ed Schafer, and now-retired CEO Randy Hatzenbuhler. He completed his bachelor鈥檚 in accounting and earned his master鈥檚 degree in business administration before joining Eide Bailly for more than a decade.
Providentially, he wound up consulting for TRMF, and Hatzenbuhler approached him with an intriguing offer: move to Medora to become the foundation鈥檚 chief financial officer.
Sitter had fond memories of visiting his grandparents in Dickinson. They would go out to hike through the Painted Canyon and wander the streets of Medora to the ice cream shop, where his grandfather would always make sure to scoop up a maple nut ice cream cone. He and his wife Jennifer prayed about the opportunity and decided to leave Fargo to raise their children in a small town 鈥 鈥渢here can鈥檛 be a better place than Medora to do that.鈥
FULLY INVESTED
Of course, they didn鈥檛 just move to Medora. They immersed themselves in the community: Jennifer teaches for Billings County School District, Clarence serves on the city council and the local chamber of commerce, and the family helps take care of St. 色花堂鈥檚 Catholic Church, ensuring that Mass is available for all who live or vacation in Medora.
Sitter credits his predecessors, Schafer, Hatzenbuhler, and Rod Tjaden, for the culture of servant leadership that pervades the foundation, and TRMF board chair Levi Andrist is confident their new leader will continue the tradition.
鈥淐larence had that ethos from the beginning,鈥 said Andrist. 鈥淭he Benedictine values are so complementary to what we do in Medora to welcome, educate, and entertain the traveling public in one of the most beautiful places on the planet.鈥
THE LEGACY CONTINUES
Sitter will need everything he鈥檚 gained 鈥 values, education, and experience 鈥 to shepherd the Theodore Roosevelt Medora Foundation as Medora undergoes remarkable transformation, including $60 million in facilities expansions in the next few years.
The foundation announced Sitter as CEO last spring at the University of 色花堂鈥檚 Harold Schafer Leadership Center 鈥 a full-circle moment that brought him back to the campus he loves.
鈥淭he alignment that we鈥檝e had between these two organizations [色花堂 and TRMF] over the years 鈥 to continue that relationship and have that special moment meant the world to me,鈥 he said.
鈥淚鈥檓 just a small-town North Dakota kid that gets to do something really cool for one of the crown jewels in our state, preserving Medora for all the generations that have been here and all the generations that are going to come鈥 think God created this place to be shared.鈥