Vice President Kamala Harris had been answering questions in Sottile Theatre for more than an hour during her โFight for Our Freedomsโ campus tour in October, when the last questioner, junior Tyler Gadson, posed one about climate change.
โThis is a wonderful question,โ Harris said, โand thank you for your leadership in so many capacities.โ
Itโs not every day that the second-in-command of the United States gives you props, but Gadson does so much at the College of Charleston, he certainly deserves the acknowledgement.ย To wit, heโs a senior intern in the Bonner Leader Program; a student-athlete academic mentor, helping student-athletes stay on top of their grades; secretary for the Student Ambassadors, whose goal is to recruit and retain first-generation students of color; basileus of the Beta Mu chapter of Omega Psi Phi fraternity;ย and CEO of Born to Prosper, a company he started with his mom with the goal of promoting a โpathway to prosperity.โ
And that doesnโt even count a full course load in political science with a concentration in crime, law and society, as well as a part-time job selling clothes at J. Fredricโs Clothiers in Charleston Place.
โAll of those things are things I love doing,โ he says. โMy parents told me that when you get a job, make sure it doesnโt feel like a job, so when I go to Bonner or mentor or recruit or work at J. Fredricโs, I forget about the clock and am just having fun. My friends are like, โOh, you have to go to work on a Saturday,โ but I’m going to have fun.โ
And maybe pick up a few more items for his impressive wardrobe collection. In addition to owning his own clothing store one day, Gadsonโs goal is to be the best-dressed lawyer and legislator in the state.
โAs Deion Sanders says, โIf you look good, you feel good; if you feel good, you play good; if you play good, they pay good,โโ smiles Gadson, wearing a gray hoodie with โBorn to Prosperโ on the front as he sits on a couch inside the National Pan-Hellenic Council house on Wentworth Street.
Gadsonโs fraternity, Omega Psi Phi, was one of the chartering organizations of the NPHC in 1930, and the house serves as the Beta Mu chapterโs home since Gadson is the only member of the fraternity at CofC. But the seven other Black fraternities and sororities on campus are also located in the brick home, so heโs got plenty of other students for cookouts, karaoke or fellowship. And his fraternity brothers at Charleston Southern, University of South Carolina and Clemson โ or those who preceded him at the College โ will lend support at a momentโs notice.
โOur motto is, โFriendship is essential to the soul,โโ Gadson says. โWe build ourselves around friendship: What does friendship mean to you? And, to me, friendship is answering the call. For the cookout, I was able to call some of the people who came before me here and ask, โCan you help me buy some supplies so that I can grill?โ And they were like, โFor sure,โ so they got off work and came over and helped me out and stayed until about 9:30-ish. Thatโs friendship.โ
Gadsonโs dad, Stacey โ an elementary school principal back home in Columbia, South Carolina โ is also a member of Omega Psi Phi. Mom Henrietta is a real estate agent and life member of an NPHC sorority, Alpha Kappa Alpha, while little brother Dalton is a high school basketball star. Gadson was all set on going to Clemson when he paid a visit to Charleston in 2020, his senior year of high school, to speak at Mother Emanuel AME Church about getting a hate-crime law passed in South Carolina.
โEveryone was so welcoming, and I was like, โI definitely might want to go to Charleston,โโ he says. โSo just the people, the family aspect, how inclusive I saw the College striving to be โ and what it continues to strive to be โ is something that definitely looked good to me.โ
Looking for ways to give back, he joined the College’s Bonner Leader Program and now helps mentor new Bonners.
โTyler is a humble force to be reckoned with โ heโs creative, perceptive and willing to tackle the parts of leadership that arenโt fun or recognized,โ says Laura Fornadel, associate director of the Center for Civic Engagement, which runs the Bonner Leader Program. โThereโs a reason the Bonners, and others, have called him โMr. Presidentโ since his first semester on campus!โ
No wonder VP Harris was so respectful!
โService is something that I really enjoy,โ Gadson says. โEverything I do is some form of service โ how am I helping somebody else today?โ
Photos by Mary Muldoon and Catie Cleveland.ย