Homer Pace

Homer Pace

Homer St. Clair Pace (April 131879—May 221942) was an American business educator and innovator in the field of accountancy who, along with his brother Charles Ashford Pace, founded Pace University in New York.

A native of Rehoboth, Ohio, Homer Pace first worked as an assistant to his father, John Fremont Pace, a Civil War veteran, in editing and publishing a weekly newspaper. He left journalism following his father's death in 1896. After working as a secretary and bookkeeper in Michigan, Texas and Minnesota, he secured a position with the Chicago Great Western Railroad. In January 1901, he was transferred to New York to serve as manager of the New York City office and, in 1902, became the Secretary of the Mason City and Fort Dodge Railroad, an affiliated line. In 1904 he passed the New York State C.P.A. examination.

In 1906, Homer Pace left the railroad to begin a business of his own. Together with his brother Charles, an attorney, he established the partnership of Pace & Pace for the purpose of preparing candidates for the New York State C.P.A. examination. In its early years, the Pace & Pace partnership ran schools that featured courses in accountancy and business law in a number of cities throughout the United States. The Pace Standardized Course could also be taken by correspondence. One of these schools, the Pace Institute of Accountancy in New York City, was chartered as Pace Institute in 1935. Homer Pace served as the president of the New York State Society of CPAs from 1924 to 1926. In 1918-19 he was Acting Deputy Commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service.

The Pace brothers prepared their own curriculum and also developed a series of lectures on the theory and practice of accounting and business law. These evolved into written textbooks used by all Pace students.

Charles Ashford Pace died in 1940, and two years later Homer Pace, who continued to serve as the first president of Pace Institute, was fatally stricken with cerebral hemorrhage while working at his office in the Institute. He was five weeks past his 63rd birthday. During his lifetime, he always emphasized that he was, first and foremost, a teacher and an educator. That was how he chose to be remembered: on his gravestone is carved the epitaph he wrote for himself, “Homer St. Clair Pace, Teacher”.

The Institute he founded along with his brother Charles became Pace College in 1948 and Pace University in 1973.

In 2002, The YMCA of Greater New York Hall of Fame featured a selection of the important people in the organization's history, which included original photographs of Charles and Homer Pace, among others.

In 2004, The New York State Society of Certified Public Accountants inducted Homer Pace into its Hall of Fame.

References

* [http://webpage.pace.edu/mweigold/lookingback.html Homer Pace biographical timeline with photographs]
* [http://www.nysscpa.org/cpajournal/2004/204/perspectives/nv1.htm A brief biography of Homer Pace by professor of accounting Allan M. Rabinowitz, published in the February 2004 issue of "The CPA Journal"]
* [http://www.nysscpa.org/society/PR/5-13-04releasea2.htm New York State Society of Certified Public Accountants May 2004 induction of Homer Pace into the Society Hall of Fame (includes a brief career sketch)]


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