St. John’s Still Means Everything To Edward Redding ’50CBA, ’86HON

January 28, 2013

Even though Edward Redding ’50CBA, ’86HON graduated from St. John’s University more than six decades ago, his connection to the University is as strong as ever. Reminiscing about his student days from his winter home in Florida, he speaks proudly of earning his B.S. in Marketing from St. John’s College of Business Administration while spending four years on the University’s Division I Men’s Basketball team. 

“I started playing basketball at St. John’s in 1946,” he said, “and Joe Lapchick was the coach at that time. I loved him. Unfortunately, he left the next year to go and coach the New York Knicks, and Frank McGuire took his place. I played under Frank McGuire for three years. Let me tell you, that was not easy, keeping up with my studies while playing four years of varsity basketball. You had to be hitting the books and passing the subjects or you were out of luck. The professors didn’t want to know that you had a practice or a game. When you came into that classroom, your academic performance was all that mattered.”

Redding did well in his classes, and following graduation took the first steps in what would become a lifelong journey through the ranks of the Nabisco Company. Although he began at the entry-level position of stacking the company’s products onto the shelves of grocery stores, the combination of his exceptional work ethic and St. John’s degree quickly propelled him into Nabisco’s Marketing Division.

“Back in my day you could start at the bottom and make your way to the top by hard work,” he recalled. “I’m not so sure you could do that today. But in my case, I started at the very bottom. And then with good fortune I was lucky enough to get a job in the New York office in marketing. The company knew what I had majored in at St. John’s and felt that I would be better suited doing marketing than stacking shelves.”

His success in New York led him to England, where he was given oversight responsibility for the company’s subsidiaries in Great Britain. Three years later he was transferred to Belgium, where he was put in charge of Nabisco’s European operations. He finally returned to the United States as President of the company’s International Division.

It was at that point that he was offered what, in his words, turned out to be “the job of a lifetime.”

“There was a big reorganization and Nabisco had just signed a contract to be the umbrella sponsor of a worldwide men’s tennis tour,’ he said. “Since I had been an athlete at St. John’s and had a lot of international experience over the years, I got the fantastic job of covering and following the tennis tour for a few years. And then the company started sponsoring a golf tour, so I got to market that as well. My athletic background at St. John’s certainly held me in good stead when that opportunity came along. I had the best job in American industry!”

Redding humbly attributes much of his career success to the superior academics he learned in the classroom and the commitment to discipline he learned on the basketball court. He has a strong affinity for the Vincentians and the impact that their unique philosophy of spiritual and practical care for others continues to have at St. John’s.
“The Vincentians are a very special order,” he remarked. “They’ve always been concerned with trying to help the underdog and the immigrants, and I admire them for that. I think that as President Fr. Harrington has done a terrific job of reminding us of that. So I’m a big fan of the Vincentians and what they stand for. Those values that the Vincentians taught us were very important when we were students, and they’re still important today.”

Recognizing the heartwarming story of a young man who rose from stacking shelves to a succession of senior management positions in one of the world’s most recognized consumer product organizations, in 1986 St. John’s conferred an honorary Doctor of Commercial Science degree upon this talented and inspirational alumnus. For Redding, this singular honor was yet another indication of the mutual admiration and respect that he and his beloved University will always have for each other.

“St. John’s was always such an important part of my background,” he said. “Like so many poor kids who had very little, I’ll never forget how difficult it was in my youth. And then for things to suddenly change and be in a position where everything seemed to go my way, I attribute all of that to St. John’s. I’ll always be incredibly proud to be known as an alumnus of St. John’s University.”