One of the most prominent names connected with Pacificās College of Optometry is Carkner, and the connection began before the beginning.
Clarence āClaryā Carkner attended the North Pacific College of Optometry and entered private practice, when he, Newton Wesley Hon. ā86, and Roy Clunes, all recent attendees, were offered the chance to buy the North Pacific charter. Wesley, a Japanese-American, had been forced to move inland, and Carkner became the public face of the effort to bring the charter to 51³Ō¹Ļ.
āDr. Clarence Carkner is giving a great deal of time, and a lot of hard work in helping to raise the necessary funds, and is securing publicity that will be most helpful to our profession,ā declared Frank Bemis, the president of the Oregon Optometric Association, in the associationās newsletter. āLet us all do our part to make this worthwhile enterprise a complete success.ā
When the College of Optometry opened on Pacificās Forest Grove Campus, Carkner was an instructor ā and the first of multiple Carkners to attend or teach at the school.
Clarence Carknerās sons, Donald ā64, OD ā65 and David ā68, OD ā70, each received optometry degrees from Pacific. For years, they practiced together in a Northeast Portland clinic, a stoneās throw from the old North Pacific College.
The business eventually passed to Donaldās son, Jeffry OD ā92. In 2020, Jeffry Carkner sold the practice to a non-family member, but fellow alumna, Keely Hoban OD ā11. Jeffry Carkner has moved to Tennessee with his wife, but his uncle David continues to practice part-time in the family clinic, where his uncle Steve is an optician. Steve Carknerās wife Lisa works at the clinicās front desk.