Closing the Loop
53 Years Later, Idaho Falls Man Finishes College
Thomas Griggs started college in fall 1969.
Then, life happened.
He left after one year at what was then Rick鈥檚 College, now Brigham Young University-Idaho, to go on a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. He got married. Had kids.
Griggs returned and soon withdrew to focus on putting food on the table.
By his early adult years, Griggs was in the workforce, managing a heating and air conditioning warehouse in East Idaho and selling computer supplies in Twin Falls.
In 1989, seeking a career change, Griggs took another run at higher education, earning 67 credit hours in nuclear engineering at 果冻传媒麻豆社.
But life threw another curveball his way. Griggs鈥 prospective employer announced a hiring freeze.
It鈥檚 never too late to accomplish a goal. Thomas Griggs, 71, who completed a bachelor鈥檚 decades after starting college in fall 1969
By then, he had taken courses over two decades and spent thousands of dollars 鈥 earning enough credits for a degree, if the credits lined up perfectly. But it wasn鈥檛 working out.
Having grown up in the railroad hub of Pocatello, Griggs set his sights on joining the railroad industry, where both his father and grandfather worked.
The career, which included stints as a railroad conductor and engineer, reaffirmed his passion for the tracks and the intricate machines that chug along them.
After Griggs retired from railroading in 2016, his wife, Linda, posed the question.
鈥淲hen are you going to finish your degree?鈥
He balked at first.
鈥淭here鈥檚 too much left,鈥 Griggs recalls saying.
But after crunching the numbers, Griggs discovered he could finish bachelor鈥檚 degrees at both BYU-I and U of I within a few years. And he could do it for cheap 鈥 using the state of Idaho鈥檚 discount that lets Idahoans age 60 and up take courses for $5 per credit hour, plus fees.
Preparing to crack open textbooks again, Griggs walked into Debbie Caudle’s office in 2018. He brought the U of I Idaho Falls student services coordinator a diet cream vanilla Coca-Cola and asked for her help to finish school. Caudle and a BYU-I advisor figured out which courses would transfer between colleges. Soon, Griggs was registered for classes at U of I and BYU-I.
He makes me smile. And boy, I’ll tell ya, he could’ve just retired and not even worried about going back to school. But he closed the loop, and I am so proud of him. Debbie Caudle, U of I College of Engineering student services coordinator
School had changed a lot from his first attempts. Gone were the days of chalkboard lectures and pen-and-paper assignments. In were the days of PowerPoints, widespread computer ownership and online classes.
Caudle, in the U of I College of Engineering, remembers Griggs adapting quickly.
He swapped his flip-phone for a smartphone to use dual-factor authentication apps for class. Student Services helped Griggs turn in work online. Professors let him submit some physical assignments.
His passion for the railroad also showed in full force. Griggs pursued an ambitious senior project for his industrial technology major — to restore a decommissioned Union Pacific railroad maintenance car that hadn’t operated 20 years.
Griggs saw the project through, decorating his 65-page paper with photos and journal entries chronicling the car’s journey from a rusted “tin can,” as he puts it, to a reliable cruiser that traverses remote stretches of railroad tracks. The bright yellow car — only large enough for two people — caught the eye of Caudle, who hosts a car show each year. When Griggs showed it there in 2021, he won spectator’s choice.
“He makes me smile,” Caudle said. “And boy, I’ll tell ya, he could’ve just retired and not even worried about going back to school. But he closed the loop, and I am so proud of him.”
In May, Griggs, 71, turned his gold tassel, earning a Bachelor of Science from U of I, one year after completing a bachelor’s in general studies from BYU-I. The degrees are stitched together with classes across decades at several universities.
In part, he earned his degrees to prove to his grandkids that going on to higher education is an important goal — one to which he can even lay claim.
But it was also about grit, he said.
“You don’t have to be young to do it,” Griggs said. “I can now say, ‘Yes, I did.’ But it only took me 53 years to do it.”
“It’s never too late to accomplish a goal,” he said.
Article by Kyle Pfannenstiel, University Communications and Marketing.
Photos by Thomas Griggs.
Published in August 2022.