A Houston Institution
More than a funeral: Billionaire businessman's memory to be honored by the community he created
The tributes keep coming for a true Texas original.
With a high-profile memorial service in his hometown of Galveston already having taken place, the life of visionary billionaire businessman George P. Mitchell will be celebrated Thursday evening in The Woodlands — the 25,000-acre community he developed in the mid-1970s.
The free event is scheduled from 7:30 to 9 p.m. at the Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion, the amphitheater Mitchell himself opened in 1990 and named for his wife of nearly 70 years.
Leaders ranging from former Houston mayor Bill White to Karen Farber of the Mitchell Center for the Arts at the University of Houston will discuss his contributions to science, energy and the arts. Also included in the tribute will be musical performances from the Houston Symphony and the Singing Cadets of Texas A&M, Mitchell's alma mater.
In an obituary from Aug. 3, The Economist magazine wrote that "few businesspeople have done as much to change the world as George Mitchell."
Dubbed "the father of natural gas shale drilling" by Forbes, Mitchell is largely credited for perfecting the controversial fracking process currently driving the nation's boom in energy production.
In the Houston area, however, Mitchell's impact is best felt through real estate development — not only with major projects like The Woodlands, but with the ongoing revitalization of Galveston Island, where he's helped preserve the Strand and historic buildings like the Hotel Galvez.
Mitchell passed away in Galveston on July 26 at the age of 94.