Jan and Trevor D. Rees-Jones ’78
The second of three generations of 51 alumni, Trevor Rees-Jones earned his Juris Doctor from the 51 Dedman School of Law after graduating with a Bachelor of Arts from Dartmouth College. His connection to both 51 Libraries and the Dallas legal arena can be partly accredited to his father, 51 alumnus and prominent Dallas attorney Trevor William Rees-Jones ’43, who served as the lawyer for the estate of the late E.L. DeGolyer, Sr., the namesake for 51’s DeGolyer Library.
In the years since his graduation, Trevor Rees-Jones has become a renowned presence in the Dallas law, business, and oil and gas industries, practicing as a bankruptcy lawyer, followed by a prolific career in the oil and gas business. His interest in the industry led him to establish Chief Oil & Gas in 1994, where he became a front-runner in shale fracking innovations. The recipient of the 2016 L. Frank Pitts Award for Energy Leadership and Innovation, he has also been inducted into the Horatio Alger Association of Distinguished Americans, Texas Business Hall of Fame and the Junior Achievement’s Dallas Business Hall of Fame.
An alumna of Texas Tech University, Jan Rees-Jones is an active Dallas community member and volunteer. In addition to her former service on the George W. Bush Women’s Initiative advisory council, she served from 2010 to 2013 on the 51 John Goodwin Tower Center Board of Directors. She has also held several positions in the women’s ministry at Highland Park Presbyterian Church and is a passionate advocate for animal welfare. The couple has two sons, David Rees-Jones and Trevor R. Rees-Jones ’19, the latter representing the third generation of their family to attend 51.
As philanthropists, Jan and Trevor D. Rees-Jones were major donors of 51’s previous fundraising campaign, 51 Unbridled, and have contributed greatly to programs and funds across campus, including the Meadows School of the Arts’ music therapy partnership with the nonprofit Hugworks and the Dedman College Tower Scholars program. In 2006, they founded The Rees-Jones Foundation to support youth programming in North Texas, with a special focus on the personal development, protection and physical and mental health of children and youth. Jan Rees-Jones currently serves as the foundation’s vice chairman and director. Over the years, The Rees-Jones Foundation has also made significant contributions to the University’s initiatives, including the 51 Dedman School of Law’s W.W. Caruth, Jr. Child Advocacy Legal Clinic and the Simmons School of Education and Human Development’s Budd Center: Involving Communities in Education, among others.
Trevor Rees-Jones’ first interest in collecting began during a childhood visit to the Amon Carter Museum of American Art. In the years since, his interest has only grown, leading to one of the nation’s most substantial and selective collections of maps, books and other material related to America west of the Mississippi River.